I am against removing "dead upstream" packages, unless upstream is completely gone, i.e. there is no way to obtain necessary files. I am maintaining at least two packages with upstream long dead, but (after my patches, of course) they're still working and are used by some people. On 19 June 2013 22:49, Connor Behan <connor.behan@gmail.com> wrote:
On 19/06/13 12:53 PM, Karol Blazewicz wrote:
On Wed, Jun 19, 2013 at 8:57 PM, Xyne <xyne@archlinux.ca> wrote:
On 2013-06-18 13:48 +0200 Karol Blazewicz wrote:
What's the policy wrt to packages that have been submitted years ago and are neither developed upstream nor maintained in the AUR since then? Just let them be or get rid of them as they're of no use? If there're old unmaintained packages foo and foo-git, is it OK to request removing at least one of them? Which one?
https://aur.archlinux.org/packages/a4/ https://aur.archlinux.org/packages/a4-bzr/
The PKGBUILD need updating but it still builds and runs so I can pick it up, update and orphan it. I don't know which filetypes does it open (.odp is not recognized) and the editor doesn't work, so you can't create a new presentation from scratch. It's man page is of no help.
Packages should only be removed if they conflict with policy (copies of official repo packages, malware, illegal packages) or if upstream is dead. Even if the PKGBUILD is an ancient relic from the age of Judd in need of a complete rewrite, we tend to leave them as placeholders. AUR lacks 'mark package as broken' feature, I guess I can leave a comment that says it's broken + post compile errors etc. Maybe somebody will post a fix ...
With regard to dead upstream, do I have to Google around to see if they moved it somewhere or is it OK to lazily submit for deletion? I'm talking about orphaned packages w/o an updated PKGBUILD in the comments or at least a comment that says upstream moved to a different place.
I would only submit such packages for deletion if their PKGBUILDs do a simple ./configure && make && make install. If there are non-trivial patches, even if they are long broken, I would leave it in the AUR. When someone comes along and says "I want to make this dead package work again" patches that once work can be a useful starting point.
-- Pozdrawiam, Karol Woźniak aka Kenji Takahashi @ kenji.sx "Don't shoot the messenger."