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lsb_4.1+Debian0~exp0_amd64.changes is NEW



lsb-base_4.1+Debian0~exp0_all.deb
  to main/l/lsb/lsb-base_4.1+Debian0~exp0_all.deb
lsb-core_4.1+Debian0~exp0_amd64.deb
  to main/l/lsb/lsb-core_4.1+Debian0~exp0_amd64.deb
lsb-cxx_4.1+Debian0~exp0_amd64.deb
  to main/l/lsb/lsb-cxx_4.1+Debian0~exp0_amd64.deb
lsb-desktop_4.1+Debian0~exp0_amd64.deb
  to main/l/lsb/lsb-desktop_4.1+Debian0~exp0_amd64.deb
lsb-graphics_4.1+Debian0~exp0_amd64.deb
  to main/l/lsb/lsb-graphics_4.1+Debian0~exp0_amd64.deb
(new) lsb-invalid-mta_4.1+Debian0~exp0_all.deb extra misc
Linux Standard Base sendmail dummy
 The Linux Standard Base (http://www.linuxbase.org/) is a standard
 core system that third-party applications written for Linux can
 depend upon.
 .
 This package contains nothing else than a fake /usr/sbin/sendmail
 command to fulfill the LSB's requirement of providing this command without
 requiring an MTA to get installed, which once introduces a daemon which
 can cause security problems and second, users get asked questions about
 how they want their MTA configured when in reality they simply wanted to
 install a deskltop application or a printer driver, but the dependency on
 LSB compliance pulls in an MTA with the installation.
 .
 The LSB requirement on /usr/sbin/sendmail comes from old times where Linux
 and Unix machines had all fixed IPs and did server tasks in data centers.
 Today's typical desktop Linux machines do not do local e-mail any more as
 users use external e-mail services.
 .
 The /usr/sbin/sendmail always exits with exit status -1 (255) and sends a
 warning message to stderr, so that if a program actually tries to send e-mail
 via the sendmail command the user gets note.
lsb-languages_4.1+Debian0~exp0_amd64.deb
  to main/l/lsb/lsb-languages_4.1+Debian0~exp0_amd64.deb
lsb-multimedia_4.1+Debian0~exp0_amd64.deb
  to main/l/lsb/lsb-multimedia_4.1+Debian0~exp0_amd64.deb
lsb-printing_4.1+Debian0~exp0_amd64.deb
  to main/l/lsb/lsb-printing_4.1+Debian0~exp0_amd64.deb
lsb-release_4.1+Debian0~exp0_all.deb
  to main/l/lsb/lsb-release_4.1+Debian0~exp0_all.deb
(new) lsb-security_4.1+Debian0~exp0_amd64.deb extra misc
Linux Standard Base 4.1 Security package
 The Linux Standard Base (http://www.linuxbase.org/) is a standard
 core system that third-party applications written for Linux can
 depend upon.
 .
 This package provides an implementation of version 4.1 of the Linux
 Standard Base Security specification for Debian on the Intel x86,
 Intel ia64 (Itanium), IBM S390, and PowerPC 32-bit architectures with
 the Linux kernel. Future revisions of the specification and this
 package may support the LSB on additional architectures and kernels.
 .
 The intent of this package is to provide a best current practice way
 of installing and running LSB packages on Debian GNU/Linux. Its
 presence does not imply that Debian fully complies
 with the Linux Standard Base, and should not be construed as a
 statement that Debian is LSB-compliant.
lsb_4.1+Debian0~exp0.dsc
  to main/l/lsb/lsb_4.1+Debian0~exp0.dsc
lsb_4.1+Debian0~exp0.tar.gz
  to main/l/lsb/lsb_4.1+Debian0~exp0.tar.gz
lsb_4.1+Debian0~exp0_all.deb
  to main/l/lsb/lsb_4.1+Debian0~exp0_all.deb


Changes:
lsb (4.1+Debian0~exp0) experimental; urgency=low
 .
  [ Till Kamppeter ]
  * Add the "lsb-invalid-mta" package, with a fake sendmail. This allows
    the installation of LSB packages to not pull in an MTA any more,
    which once adds awkward configuration questions to the installation
    process and second adds an often unnneeded daemon to the system.
    (LP: #141641)
 .
  [ Didier Raboud ]
  * Upgrade to support LSB 4.1. (Closes: #586191, LP: #385606, #386128)
    LSB changes:
     - Bump Depends:
       - on libglib2.0-0  to >= 2.12.13;
       - on fontconfig    to >= 2.6.0;
       - on libglib2.0-0  to >= 2.12.13;
       - on libatk1.0-0   to >= 1.10.3;
       - on libpango1.0-0 to >= 1.10.4;
       - on libgtk2.0-0   to >= 2.10.14;
     - Add Depends:
       - on libglu1;
       - on libcairo2     to >= 1.2.0;
       - on libxtst6;
       - on ghostscript-cups;
     - In lsb, bump lsb-printing from Suggests to Depends.
     - Add the lsb-security package.
     - Drop the now-obsolete lsb-qt4 package.
    Debian changes:
     - libgl1-mesa-glx is the first alternative for libgl1;
     - Make sure all packages have ${misc:Depends}.


Override entries for your package:
lsb-base_4.1+Debian0~exp0_all.deb - required misc
lsb-core_4.1+Debian0~exp0_amd64.deb - extra misc
lsb-cxx_4.1+Debian0~exp0_amd64.deb - extra misc
lsb-desktop_4.1+Debian0~exp0_amd64.deb - extra misc
lsb-graphics_4.1+Debian0~exp0_amd64.deb - extra misc
lsb-languages_4.1+Debian0~exp0_amd64.deb - extra misc
lsb-multimedia_4.1+Debian0~exp0_amd64.deb - extra misc
lsb-printing_4.1+Debian0~exp0_amd64.deb - extra misc
lsb-release_4.1+Debian0~exp0_all.deb - optional misc
lsb_4.1+Debian0~exp0.dsc - source misc
lsb_4.1+Debian0~exp0_all.deb - extra misc

Announcing to debian-experimental-changes@lists.debian.org
Announcing to debian-devel-changes@lists.debian.org
Closing bugs: 586191 


Your package contains new components which requires manual editing of
the override file.  It is ok otherwise, so please be patient.  New
packages are usually added to the override file about once a week.

You may have gotten the distribution wrong.  You'll get warnings above
if files already exist in other distributions.


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