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Code Editor : experimental.txt
Handling multiple server versions thanks to experimental ======================================================== Cyril Brulebois <kibi@debian.org> Context ------- A quick overview of how things work upstream for the server: * Patches get reviewed and merged into the `master` branch. * After a few release candidates, `master` gets tagged (say: `1.10` or `1.10.0`), and a stable branch (`server-1.10-branch` in this case) is created to receive bug fixes. * Those bug fixes usually are cherry-picks from commits in the `master` branch. * This leads to stable bugfix releases: `1.10.1`, `1.10.2`, and so on. It doesn’t make much sense to try and package `master` on a continuous fashion, since the ABI can be broken multiple times, without a bump for the ABI version numbers every time. It’s usually done once a bunch of major changes landed, and when things are supposed to be stable for a while. On the packaging side, as explained on the link:dependencies.html[dependencies between server and drivers] page, a bump means the need for a rebuild of the relevant drivers (input and/or video). That’s why the idea is to concentrate on upstream release candidates and official releases. Depending on available developer time (both upstream and in Debian), several branches can be developed/maintained in parallel, so it can be worth having several versions available in parallel, which is where `experimental` is handy. Keeping on with this example, with `1.9` in `unstable`, release candidates for `1.10` can be uploaded to `experimental`, along with a few drivers so that it’s actually useful. Selecting drivers ----------------- To avoid repetitive and sometimes pointless work, it’s probably a good idea to upload (to `experimental` as well) only a few drivers built against the server in `experimental`. ABI might be bumped between release candidates (that happened between `1.10rc3` and `1.10` for example), so drivers would need to be rebuilt (even though binNMUs might help). The proposed drivers can be seen on the link:squeeze-backports.html[backports policy for squeeze] page, along with a tiny description for each. Building drivers in experimental -------------------------------- Having a driver in `experimental` doesn’t change much: It is sufficient to declare a build-dependency against `xserver-xorg-dev (>= $serverminver)`, where `$serverminver` can be seen in: * `debian/serverminver` in the `xorg-server` source package: see its first line. * `/usr/share/xserver-xorg/inputdrvdep`: see the needed version of `xserver-xorg-core`. * `/usr/share/xserver-xorg/videodrvdep`: ditto. So, for a given version of a driver in `unstable`, bumping the build-dep version and uploading to `experimental` should be enough, providing it doesn’t require further changes (source code changes are sometimes needed to support building against a newer server). When that happens, the revision number can be constructed by appending `+exp1`. The idea here is to avoid things like: * `1.42-1` to `unstable`. * `1.42-2` to `experimental`: bump the build-dep. * `1.42-3` to `unstable`: revert the build-dep bump, add a bugfix. * `1.42-4` to `experimental`: build the build-dep again, keep the bugfix. * etc. Instead, that seems more natural: * `1.42-1` to `unstable`. * `1.42-1+exp1` to `experimental`: bump the build-dep. * `1.42-2` to `unstable`: add a bugfix to ++unstable++’s version. * `1.42-2+exp1` to `experimental`: rebuild against experimental (merging or rebasing the build-dep bump). **** .Note Remember `experimental` is special. With the above sequence of uploads, if the `1.42-2+exp1` version isn’t uploaded, the `1.42-1+exp1` upload might disappear from `experimental` after some time, since the version in `unstable` is more recent: the “obsolete” package goes away. That’s why it’s important to remember uploading to `experimental` as well when uploading a new driver to `unstable`. ****
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