Translation(s) : English - Français - 日本語

News for Debian developers

This wiki page collects small news that all developers should know but that are not worth a dedicated mail to debian-devel-announce. Follow the template "Example of news" and add your news below it. See /Help for more information on how to write entries.

If you are able to post to debian-devel-announce (all Debian members can) and there are 5 or more items below, you might want to send out the news. To send out a new issue, you can use this helper script to generate the email version of this page. After generating the mail, proof-read it, correct any spelling, formatting or grammatical errors and send out the mail. Once the mail is sent and archived, please delete the items that were sent, add a link to the archived mail in the Previous news section and mention the mail in ProjectNews.

Example of news

This is a sample news. Copy it and edit the title, content and signature... You can use links like this. Put real news below this sample.

-- Your Name

MySQL server and client virtual packages

Over the last 6 months, we have introduced a few new MySQL variants into Debian and expanded the use of the existing (but never formalized AFAICT) virtual-mysql-* virtual packages to supporting switching in/out the different variants.

The wider intent is that all maintainers of packages that depend on mysql-server or mysql-client are encouraged to add as alternative dependencies the virtual packages virtual-mysql-server or virtual-mysql-client.

This will enable the alternative MariaDB and Percona packages to satisfy the dependency. MySQL 5.5, MariaDB 5.5 and PXC 5.5 are all binary-compatible and most likely to work with any program that currently uses MySQL in Debian. If you prefer some of the non-Oracle versions of MySQL, you can even default to one of them using syntax like for example 'Depends: mariadb-server | virtual-mysql-server'.

-- James Page

As-installed package checking

Several tools for checking packages as installed on the system include piuparts (install/upgrade/remove testing) and DEP-8/autopkgtest/debci (functional testing) and jenkins (whole system testing). A lesser known tool written by Jakub Wilk called adequate checks packages installed on the system and reports bugs and policy violations. It reports incompatible licenses, missing libraries/symbols/symbol versions, broken ABIs, broken binfmt entries, missing alternatives, missing copyright files, broken symlinks, program name collisions, obsolete conffiles, Python byte compiling issues and more. Please consider checking your packages with piuparts, autopkgtest and adequate before you upload.

-- Paul Wise

Previous news

36 35 34 33 32 31 30
29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20
19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10
9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1


CategoryPermalink