Hi Simon, Personally, I can't say that I'm too interested in most of these packages, but I just wanted to mention: If you have no comaintainers for a package, you could simply wait until another user flags the package out of date and AUR goes through the standard process of orphan requests. This way, at least, if some packages you own that aren't going to be picked up don't need to be updated, they'll still be living and used. Regards, Kevin On Thu, Nov 18, 2021 at 10:51:34AM -0300, Gabriel Dutra via aur-general wrote:
Hi, Simon
On Thu, Nov 18, 2021 at 2:02 PM Simon Legner via aur-general <aur-general@lists.archlinux.org> wrote:
Hey,
earlier this year I've stared using macOS and Fedora. With mixed feelings I'm leaving Arch Linux (for now).
Currently I'm the co/maintainer of 106 AUR packages: https://aur.archlinux.org/packages/?K=simon04&SeB=m
Is there a standard procedure for safely un-maintaining all packages? Just abandoning all packages is not the best idea, is it? I'd like to find caring maintainers for my packages.
I could take care of:
- transifex-client - coredns
Em qui., 18 de nov. de 2021 às 10:44, Aleksandar Trifunovic via aur-general <aur-general@lists.archlinux.org> escreveu:
Hi Simon,
On Thu, Nov 18, 2021 at 2:02 PM Simon Legner via aur-general <aur-general@lists.archlinux.org> wrote:
Hey,
earlier this year I've stared using macOS and Fedora. With mixed feelings I'm leaving Arch Linux (for now).
Currently I'm the co/maintainer of 106 AUR packages: https://aur.archlinux.org/packages/?K=simon04&SeB=m
Is there a standard procedure for safely un-maintaining all packages? Just abandoning all packages is not the best idea, is it? I'd like to find caring maintainers for my packages.
I could take care of:
- osmium-tool - osm2pgsql - libosmium - libosmpbf - pyosmium - tilemaker
Thank you for great thirteen years, simon04
Best, Aleks
-- Kevin Morris Software Developer Identities: - kevr @ Libera