João Valverde <j...@v6e.pt> ezt írta (időpont: 2022. jan. 21., P, 11:17):
>
>
>
> On 21/01/22 09:44, Bálint Réczey wrote:
> > Hi João,
> >
> > João Valverde <j...@v6e.pt> ezt írta (időpont: 2022. jan. 21., P, 1:14):
> >>
> >>
> >> On 20/01/22 12:41, Bálint Réczey wrote:
> >>> Hi All,
> >>>
> >>> João shared his opinion about the project's commitment to maintain
> >>> stable shared library ABI within stable branches:
> >>> https://gitlab.com/wireshark/wireshark/-/issues/17822
> >>>
> >>> I believe the current practice is reasonable and beneficial enough for
> >>> many parties to warrant the work, but I could be wrong.
> >>>
> >> I agree the current practice is reasonable and beneficial, and it is
> >> currently documented in README.Developer[1], chapter 7.3, to the best of
> >> my understanding and ability.
> > OK, great to hear that from you. I got the impression from the gitlab
> > comments that you had a different view.
> >
> >> Do you have changes you'd like to propose? I'll gladly go over those.
> > I'm happy with the the project's commitment to ABI stability and agree
> > with Gerald's proposal of trying to revive the abi-complicance-checker
> > test to help him in the final release checks. I may find time to
> > restore the changes after this discussion is settled.
> >
> > Since you are asking, I'd very much welcome less hostility from your
> > side than what I observed in [2] when I reported the ABI breakage.
> >
> > What triggered my email was that after I reported the ABI breakage you
> > made in the stable branch you refused to own and fix it [3] and even
> > after Gerald kindly stepped in with the fix [4] you kept arguing ([5]
> > [6] ...) and this made me tired and wondering if you really represent
> > the project's opinion as you seemed to believe.
>
> I don't mind the email. We do disagree on many things and what I said on
> the Gitlab issue is exactly what I meant. My lack of patience with you
> is entirely justified.
>
> >
> >> What I won't do, however, is maintain your package for you.
> > I maintain the package in Debian for the users and not particularly
> > for myself since I'm not using Wireshark in my profession as I used to
> > do.
> > In general I'm happy to accept help, but I think I've never asked for
> > your help specifically for that package and I note that I should not
> > ask in  the future either.
> >
> > The Debian packaging in the upstream repository, i.e. [7] serves a
> > different set of users, those who want to be closer to the latest
> > development of Wireshark and the packaging scripts are kept a bit
> > simpler. I intentionally don't make too many changes there to let the
> > Wireshark project members set the direction and the changes there go
> > through the regular local review process. I believe the packaging in
> > itself is useful and the .symbols files help noticing ABI changes.
> >
>
> I strongly believe the upstream Debian package to be a detriment to the
> project, and not in the interest of users either. I will share my
> experience as a user. I  had to build the Wireshark Debian package to
> fix something or other. I looked up online the incantation to use and it
> seemed to work ok. After it was done building it spewed a bunch of files
> all over my filesystem. Many different packages. I tried installing them
> one by one and didn't succeed. I tried all at once and didn't succeed
> either. I had to guess the order necessary to get it to install.
> Afterward there was some apt conflict with the Wireshark package in the
> official repos. I tried uninstalling the packages I had manually
> installed and broke the package manager with some dependency issue.
> After half an hour trying to fix it I gave up. The end.

Before installing the upstream packages it is recommended to remove
all installed packages generated from Debian's official wireshark
source package because incompatibilities can't be prevented otherwise.
When testing new builds I do that and just install all built .deb-s.

> There is no good reason for this package to exist upstream in its
> current state, nor does Debian recommend that practice in general, AFAIK.

Debian many years ago used to _not_ recommend upstreams to to keep
packaging scripts in their main repo because Debian's tools could not
clean up the debian/ dir automatically. Now this is solved in the
tools, thus upstreams are free to keep or not keep Debian packaging in
their source tree.

As I wrote earlier I believe the upstream debian/ dir helps in
monitoring ABI stability, but I don't insist keeping it if the project
decides to remove it.

Cheers,
Balint
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