Differences between revisions 12 and 14 (spanning 2 versions)
Revision 12 as of 2014-02-09 21:41:43
Size: 2401
Editor: ?SalvatoreBonaccorso
Comment: remove reference to rt.debian.org as we are going to drop the use in future
Revision 14 as of 2014-03-06 09:46:06
Size: 2382
Editor: ?SalvatoreBonaccorso
Comment:
Deletions are marked like this. Additions are marked like this.
Line 18: Line 18:
The normal procedure is that some member of the team claims a reported issue (mostly through RT) and takes it from there until the advisory is fully released. The normal procedure is that some member of the team claims a reported issue and takes it from there until the advisory is fully released.
Line 34: Line 34:
 * http://anonscm.debian.org/viewvc/secure-testing/doc/narrative_introduction?view=co  * http://anonscm.debian.org/viewvc/secure-testing/doc/public/security_tracker?view=co

Debian Security Team

Infrastructure

Interacting with the team

Usual roles

The normal procedure is that some member of the team claims a reported issue and takes it from there until the advisory is fully released.

Next to the "full members" (part of the 'security' group), the team also has "assistants" (only in the sec_embargo group). This last role is usually for new members of the team. An assistant can read almost all data that the full members can, and construct a full advisory, but not actually install the updated packages into the archive. A full member will review the assistant's work and release it.

Task description

The security team evaluates security threats, and produces updated packages for our stable and old-stable releases, and release these packages through security.debian.org together with an advisory mail.

The preferred situation is that the regular maintainer of an affected package (who is most familiar with its ins and outs) prepares updated packages or a ready to use patch which, after approval, will be uploaded to security-master. If the regular maintainer can't or won't provide updates (in time), the security team will take the task of creating the updated packages.

Security for testing and unstable is not officially guaranteed, but the team tracks those distributions as well in the security tracker. A number of regular volunteers outside of the team help with triaging issues on the security tracker.

More stuff

Some brief links: