On Tue, Aug 26, 2008 at 12:21 AM, Eric Belanger <belanger@astro.umontreal.ca> wrote:
On Mon, 25 Aug 2008, Andreas Radke wrote:
Am Mon, 25 Aug 2008 09:43:28 -0500 schrieb "Dan McGee" <dpmcgee@gmail.com>:
On Mon, Aug 25, 2008 at 9:36 AM, Andreas Radke <a.radke@arcor.de> wrote:
-2 fixes unwanted info directory.
Don't we want to keep the info/ dir, now that we had this discussion a few months back? As info is the primary mode of documentation for some of these GNU programs, it is probably helpful when people are getting their system up and running if they don't yet have a net connection.
-Dan
I think there was no rule decided. Afair we wanted to let it up to the maintainer if he wants to add info files and further documentation when he thinks it's helpful. I don't use the info command at all but could also live with enabling all documentation. We ship headers in every case so why not all possible content upstream developers install by default.
Maybe we should put a clear statement into the Arch packaging standards wiki page.
-Andy
My understanding on this was that we include the info pages/docs. The only exception was for the case when the documentation increase the package size significantly like in the case of glib2. Then the maintainer can, at his discretion, disable docs.
Yeah, there was never a hard and fast rule here, but Eric has the right of it. We want to include info pages for things that have shitty docs normally, for one (grub is the good use case here - do a "man grub" when you get a chance), but we also don't want superfluous info files for no reason. glib2 is the perfect use-case for stripping docs, but I think in most cases, they should be left in as the original author of the software intended it.