i don't really follow this mailinglist closely, so i only catched up on
this thread now...
On 11/18/21 10:10, Roman Haefeli wrote:
>
>> I think it is good practice to ping the
>> package maintainer to make sure he/she is aware of the new version...
>
> Yeah, for Debian this makes sense.
as the maintainer, i can say it doesn't really make sense (for me).
i typically monitor upstream releases via some automated means, and
adding active pings only adds noise.
i do my best to keep packages up-to-date and i think i'm doing a rather
good job here, and in general updated packages appear within a month or so.
of course, for you a delay of anything more than 3 days might be
inacceptable.
for the Debian jacktrip package specifically, the upload dates are:
|version| released | Debian |
|-------|------------|------------|
| 1.4.0 | 2021-11-03 | never! |
| 1.4.1 | 2021-11-11 | 2021-11-25 |
| 1.4.2 | 2021-12-06 | 2021-12-07 |
| 1.4.3 | 2021-12-19 | 2021-12-22 |
now while i uploaded 1.4.1 to Debian on 2021-11-25, it did not
immediately appear in the archives, simply because this was the first
version in Debian that has both a GUI and a non-GUI flavour, resulting
in two binary packages, in which case there is a bit of Debian
bureaucracy involved (that includes a full review of the package).
> Currently, it appears that Debian 10 (Buster) ships only with jacktrip
> 1.1 and Debian 11 (Bullseye) with jacktrip 1.3. There is no jacktrip
> package in *-backports yet.
and there haven't been any plans for providing backports packages so far
- nobody ever requested them.
> the Jacktrip page of Debian's package-manager is fascinating. all
> kinds of interesting things.
of course, reading this entire thread is a bit of a sobering experience.
thanks for all the hard work.
fds
IOhannes