On 7/2/22 12:31, Ben Greiner wrote:
Am 02.07.22 um 11:41 schrieb Eric Schirra:
Am Samstag, 2. Juli 2022, 11:27:03 CEST schrieb Ben Greiner:
s/calibre/nextcloud-desktop/ and if you have ever dealt with any nextcloud related package, you won't have any hope that upstream will fix it soon, even if you report it. (Something I would expect from a responsible openSUSE package maintainer). BTW: https://github.com/nextcloud/desktop/issues/4690
If you are addressing me, since I am the maintainer, I find this statement an absolute impertinence. I do there in my spare time to help the general public and I have no time to fight with upstream in long discussions. For that there are paid employees of SUSE.
Absolutely not. Nobody tells you to do any work. But if you are not willing to properly maintain a package, then don't assume the role for the package. Even if you do, you should rather be thankful for any bug reports instead of harassing reporters.
Calm down everybody. This personal fight does not help to solve any problem at all. Although I don't always agree with Eric in all details I can confirm that he does an enormous amount of work also on packages I'm using.
Nonsense. Nothing is as fast as openSUSE Tumbleweed moving with upstream changes. You complain about Tumbleweed changing its packages too fast in one message and then on being too slow in the next.
One of the things I'd like to be clarified at openSUSE project level is that following the old-fashioned mantra "Tumbleweed is experimental and Leap is for stable systems" sometimes leads to submit requests being declined by maintainers because the update is not compatible with Leap or is considered too new. IMHO this blocks progress in an inappropriate way. (I'm running *everything* on Tumbleweed. And these systems are all important for my daily work.) Ciao, Michael.