Subject: [ANNOUNCE] pkgsrc-users mailing list
To: None <tech-pkg@NetBSD.org>
From: Johnny C. Lam <jlam@NetBSD.org>
List: tech-pkg
Date: 02/23/2006 23:47:33
The NetBSD Project has created a new mailing list "pkgsrc-users@NetBSD.org"
to better serve the pkgsrc user community and to help refocus the
existing "tech-pkg@NetBSD.org" mailing list for technical discussions.
The charters for these two lists are:
pkgsrc-users@NetBSD.org:
This is a general purpose list for most issues regarding the
pkgsrc, regardless of platform, e.g. soliciting user help for
pkgsrc configuration, unexpected build failures, using particular
packages, upgrading pkgsrc installations, questions regarding
the pkgsrc release branches, etc. General announcements or
proposals for changes that impact the pkgsrc user community,
e.g. major infrastructure changes, new features, package
removals, etc., may also be posted.
tech-pkg@NetBSD.org:
This is a list for technical discussions related to pkgsrc
development, e.g. soliciting feedback for changes to pkgsrc
infrastructure, proposed new features, questions related
to porting pkgsrc to a new platform, advice for maintaining
a package, patches that affect many packages, help requests
moved from "pkgsrc-users@NetBSD.org" when an infrastructure
bug is found, etc.
All current subscribers to the "tech-pkg" mailing list are encouraged
to subscribe to the "pkgsrc-users" mailing list.
pkgsrc began in August 1997 as a package system for NetBSD. Now
entering the project's ninth year, pkgsrc has been ported to multiple
operating systems and has grown to contain well over 5,000 packages.
Due to the overwhelming success of pkgsrc, we are attracting a much
wider audience of users across several different platforms, and we
are discovering that the continuing growth of pkgsrc is straining the
usability of our one mailing list devoted to discussing "all things
pkgsrc". The creation of a new list devoted to user-related issues
will provide pkgsrc with two forums that have separate focuses and
will help users and developers alike.
-- Johnny Lam <jlam@NetBSD.org>