[Debian-med-packaging] Bug#667161: Language extensions in scripts (Was: Bug#667161: FASTX-Toolkit faisl to build with GCC-4.7)
Charles Plessy
plessy at debian.org
Fri Apr 27 09:15:54 UTC 2012
Dear Gordon,
sorry for exposing our disagreements. I have transferred the discussion in
another bug report. Feel free to follow it if you are curious, and do not
hesitate to give your opinion.
http://bugs.debian.org/190753#139
Have a nice day,
-- Charles
Le Fri, Apr 27, 2012 at 08:59:46AM +0200, Andreas Tille a écrit :
> Hi,
>
> as it seems necessary to bring up this discussion again, I'd like to
> give some reasons why policy states something that makes sense and it is
> not in the interest of users to have those language extensions.
>
> On Fri, Apr 27, 2012 at 08:37:08AM +0900, Charles Plessy wrote:
> > Le Thu, Apr 26, 2012 at 10:21:53PM +0200, Andreas Tille a écrit :
> > >
> > > When preparing the recent package I noticed that you are providing
> > > scripts featuring language extensions (.pl and .sh). Debian Policy[1]
> > > says:
> > >
> > > When scripts are installed into a directory in the system PATH, the
> > > script name should not include an extension such as .sh or .pl that
> > > denotes the scripting language currently used to implement it.
> > >
> > > and there are several good reasons to follow this advise. Could you
> > > imagine to drop this extension in the script names - IMHO this would be
> > > a good idea as long as fastx-toolkit is 0.0.x numbered.
> >
> > Dear Andreas and Gordon,
> >
> > please do not change the names unless a transition period of 1-2 years
> > is planned where both names are available together.
> >
> > That recommendation of Debian Policy is a pure disaster, that makes Debian
> > systems incompatible with all the rest of the world.
>
> I do not think that policy really contains disastrous statements and
> your statement about "incompatibility with the rest of the world" is a
> bit overheated. The only reason for incompatibility would be if we
> would rename those scripts without any alternative but as you have
> noticed I did not do this and the reason for this was exactly not to
> become incompatible.
>
> To stay compatible we as the maintainer of a set of programs do have
> some obligation to also teach authors of software what might be good or
> not. I admit I was a bit short in my initial mail and just stated that
> there are several good reasons. So I try to give some of them here now:
>
> 1. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Filename_extension#Command_name_issues
>
> "The use of a filename extension in a command name appears
> occasionally, usually as a side effect of the command having been
> implemented as a script (in Bourne shell, Python, etc.) and the
> interpreter name being suffixed to the command name, a practice common
> on systems like Windows and Mac OS X, which rely on globally set
> associations between filename extension and interpreter, but sharply
> deprecated in UNIX-derived systems like Linux and Apple's Mac OS X,
> where the interpreter is normally specified as a header in the script.
> ...
> "
>
> 2. http://www.talisman.org/~erlkonig/documents/commandname-extensions-considered-harmful
>
> ... very reasonable and sane explanation of the problem leading to the
> consequence:
>
> "Commands should never have filename extensions.
>
> Rely on interpreter directives instead or some other paradigm that
> prevent the implementation from being exposed, or worse yet, lied about,
> within the very name of the command.
> "
>
> 3. http://lists.debian.org/debian-policy/2003/04/msg00031.html
>
> This was one of first hits of numerous others on Debian lists which
> possibly leaded to the entry in Debian policy. The reasoning was
> certainly influenced by the knowledge given above and expresses the
> fact that people might assume a user has understand the things above
> and regards scripts featuring extensions are rather simple examples,
> code snippets or whatever and not fully grown programs. Somebody
> might not consider your code as honest tool or whatever.
>
> 4. In addition I do not see what actual information such extensions are
> providing to the end user. A user expects a program to do a job.
> Fullstop. The user does not need to care about the language a program
> is written in if it just does what it is expected to do. An extension
> at best means more typing work (and yes, I do know enouth users
> specifically working in the field of biology who do not know tab
> extension and when called in scripts - which is basically the only
> problem of a renaming you need to type the extension anyway).
>
> In the same way I'm always voting against program descriptions which
> are telling something like
> "Foo is a programm written in bar to do foobar"
> and would always vote to rather write
> "Foo does foobar {in a specific manner/like baz/... some other
> useful information for the user}"
> The programming language is just developer oriented metainformation
> with no additional value for the user who is interested in the
> functionality of the program.
>
> In short: The goal of Debian (policy) is not to make Debian incompatible
> with the rest of the world. It rather intends to spread knowledge about
> agreed principles into the world. When writing mails like this I try to
> do my obligation as Debian maintainer. And yes, for sure some migration
> path might make sense. In this sense my wording about 0.0.x numbered
> versions should have been understood. It is quite usual that projects
> change their interface when increasing their version numbers and users
> should be aware of this. My reasoning was not in the sense of Debian
> but rather in the interest of fastx-toolkit.
>
> Kind regards
>
> Andreas.
>
> --
> http://fam-tille.de
>
>
> --
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--
Charles Plessy
Debian Med packaging team,
http://www.debian.org/devel/debian-med
Tsurumi, Kanagawa, Japan
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