Your message dated Mon, 5 Jul 2021 22:28:27 +0200 with message-id <YONra/1Lzw/6usNE@ramacher.at> and subject line Re: Bug#990699: release.debian.org: Sorting out bug 990059 in bullseye has caused the Debian Bug report #990699, regarding release.debian.org: Sorting out bug 990059 in bullseye to be marked as done. This means that you claim that the problem has been dealt with. If this is not the case it is now your responsibility to reopen the Bug report if necessary, and/or fix the problem forthwith. (NB: If you are a system administrator and have no idea what this message is talking about, this may indicate a serious mail system misconfiguration somewhere. Please contact owner@bugs.debian.org immediately.) -- 990699: https://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=990699 Debian Bug Tracking System Contact owner@bugs.debian.org with problems
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- To: Debian Bug Tracking System <submit@bugs.debian.org>
- Subject: release.debian.org: Sorting out bug 990059 in bullseye
- From: Mike Hommey <mh+reportbug@glandium.org>
- Date: Mon, 05 Jul 2021 09:33:40 +0900
- Message-id: <[🔎] 162544522069.86483.15424368177527396516.reportbug@goemon>
Package: release.debian.org Severity: important Usertags: binnmu transition Hi, Recent versions of libnss3 had a backwards incompatible change that made packages built with the newer versions fail to work properly with the older version of the package that is in bullseye. That wouldn't be a problem if 2 packages that use the problematic symbol and are built with the newer version hadn't themselves made it to bullseye. The packages are, namely, firefox-esr and curl (curl has only become a problem this week). I uploaded a version of nss (2:3.67-2) that works around the issue and will make rebuilds of those packages work with the version of nss in bullseye, meaning we'd need binNMUs of both curl and firefox-esr and subsequent transitions. However, firefox-esr is due for a security update next tuesday/wednesday, so it will be rebuilt anyways. I guess we might as well wait. Which leaves us with just curl. nmu curl_7.74.0-1.3 . ANY . -m 'Rebuild against newer libnss3-dev' Mike
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--- Begin Message ---
- To: Mike Hommey <mh+reportbug@glandium.org>, 990699-done@bugs.debian.org
- Subject: Re: Bug#990699: release.debian.org: Sorting out bug 990059 in bullseye
- From: Sebastian Ramacher <sramacher@debian.org>
- Date: Mon, 5 Jul 2021 22:28:27 +0200
- Message-id: <YONra/1Lzw/6usNE@ramacher.at>
- In-reply-to: <[🔎] 162544522069.86483.15424368177527396516.reportbug@goemon>
- References: <[🔎] 162544522069.86483.15424368177527396516.reportbug@goemon>
On 2021-07-05 09:33:40 +0900, Mike Hommey wrote: > Package: release.debian.org > Severity: important > Usertags: binnmu transition > > Hi, > > Recent versions of libnss3 had a backwards incompatible change that made > packages built with the newer versions fail to work properly with the older > version of the package that is in bullseye. > > That wouldn't be a problem if 2 packages that use the problematic symbol > and are built with the newer version hadn't themselves made it to > bullseye. The packages are, namely, firefox-esr and curl (curl has only > become a problem this week). > > I uploaded a version of nss (2:3.67-2) that works around the issue and > will make rebuilds of those packages work with the version of nss in > bullseye, meaning we'd need binNMUs of both curl and firefox-esr and > subsequent transitions. > > However, firefox-esr is due for a security update next tuesday/wednesday, > so it will be rebuilt anyways. I guess we might as well wait. > > Which leaves us with just curl. > > nmu curl_7.74.0-1.3 . ANY . -m 'Rebuild against newer libnss3-dev' Thanks, scheduled. > > Mike > -- Sebastian RamacherAttachment: signature.asc
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