Aubin Paul <aubin@punknews.org> wrote: > 2) If I make a bug-fix, and submit it upstream, do I have to wait > for the upstream version to apply my fix, or can I just apply it > myself. (In one of my packages, there were some GTK warnings, so I > fixed those, and sent a patch to the upstream guy, but can I just > apply them now, as part of my .diff?) I would actually like to suggest a package that could help you manage the changes you make locally while maintaining a prestine copy of the upstream source (and subsequent upstream revisions): CVS. Manjo made a great package that wrappers both cvs(1) and dpkg-buildpackage(8) called cvs-buildpackage(8). Must get: cvs - Concurrent Versions System cvs-buildpackage - Debian package scripts for CVS source trees. Good idea: tkcvs - A graphical front-end to CVS cvs-doc - Documentation for CVS cvsbook - Open Source Development with CVS, an online book It took me a while to really understand the "magic" that happens in CVS, but now that I've used it extensively for a while, I could never see my life without it. Granted, I still do a lot of my CVS management w/o wrappers, but manjo's package will help out immensly. See the info on CVS and building Debian packages on the Developer's Corner. -- Chad Walstrom <chewie@wookimus.net> | a.k.a. ^chewie http://www.wookimus.net/ | s.k.a. gunnarr Key fingerprint = B4AB D627 9CBD 687E 7A31 1950 0CC7 0B18 206C 5AFD
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