Hi,
Paul Wise wrote (11 Jul 2014 02:58:20 GMT) :
> On Fri, Jul 11, 2014 at 4:50 AM, intrigeri wrote:
> An update on that:
> The new hardware is setup and DSA have installed the necessary tools.
The Tails sources.{new,patches} still seem outdated. Is some part of
the system not back up yet?
>> a. Enable anyone to easily find potential action items; that is:
>> make it easy to filter what should be ignored ("legit" delta) and
>> what should be improved.
> My idea here was to add that to the new tracker.d.o interface and
> associate it with the person who logged in, since what people want to
> see might be different.
Looks good to me.
>> b. Visualize the evolution of a given derivative's delta with Debian
>> => detect if the situation is improving or getting out of control
>> => derivatives developers can be happy and proud, or react
>> promptly; Debian contributors can evaluate how a given derivative
>> is "nice" to Debian.
> Should be easy to add rrdtool graphs or the like. If we want something
> more advanced than that, a database would probably be required.
IMO rrdtool graphs should be good enough.
>> 1. Have explanations about the delta in each case
> That information should be in debian/changelog, which would be in the delta.
I could agree on this principle, but in practice, I doubt derivative
developers explain in debian/changelog what part of their delta should
be ignored ("legit" delta) and what should be improved. DEP-3's
"Forwarded" field, when applicable, seems more adequate. Also,
debian/changelog is not machine-readable, is meant to document
incremental changes, and does not provide an aggregated view of the
current state of things.
Looking at Tails current delta, as documented [1] a few months ago:
* Tails-specific packages: the information that should be easy to
retrieve (ideally, in a machine-readable way) is "these packages
are too specific to go into Debian (not mentioning the release
cycle mismatch)". Even if we did add this information to
debian/changelog, it would be quickly buried below dozens of other
entries, and hard to find. Same for packages that are not really
Tails-specific, but that can probably never be uploaded to Debian
for legal reasons; same for packages that were removed for Debian
(for good reasons) but are still needed in Tails.
* modified packages: in general, ideally the relevant information
should live in per-patch DEP-3 headers. Adding it to
debian/changelog would duplicate information, in a way that's not
easy to retrieve.
* backports that would be a huge pain to properly maintain in
wheezy-backports: could be documented in debian/changelog.
=> I'm unconvinced that documenting this kind of things in
debian/changelog's would help much. Not saying that our initial idea
is the best possible one, though :) Thoughts, other ideas?
[1]
https://lists.debian.org/debian-project/2014/05/msg00036.html
>> Ideally, for 3.0 (quilt) packages, compare-source-package-list
>> could look into debian/patches for derivatives-specific patches,
>> and retrieve information from DEP-3 headers.
> That sounds like an interesting complement to diffs of debian/changelog.
OK, created
https://labs.riseup.net/code/issues/7608. Is there
a meta-package or something to track such tasks in the Debian BTS?
Alternatively, should I just add these ideas to
https://wiki.debian.org/Derivatives/Integration#Ideas ? I've also
found a list of FIXME's on top of the compare-source-package-list
script, so I'm a bit confused.
>> 2. Generate graphs displaying the evolution of a derivative's delta
>>
>> This requires storing history of at least sources.{new,patches},
>> and having some code that generates graphs out of it. Presumably,
>> once specified properly, this could be a great task for someone
>> learning programming.
> sources.{new,patches} already store both current and historical data.
Great!
In order to be able to graph things, it seems to me that one also need
to know the date/time when a given version of a {new,modified} package
was last seen in the derivative's APT repo. Would you happily take
a patch against compare-source-package-list, that stores this
information in sources.{new,patches}?
> BTW: I plan to have a DebConf14 BoF about the derivatives
> patch-generation stuff.
Awesome. I'll be there.
Cheers,
--
intrigeri