I think we can actually make liburing a sync. AIUI the Ubuntu delta is all about fixing a FTBFS with ftbfs with glibc 2.34 and fixing autopkgtest test failures.
The FTBFS seems to be gone as I built the Debian package in a Jammy PPA (with -proposed enabled) on all the supported architectures, with no problems:
which I kind of expected from the quick look I had to the Debian packaging repository commit history. In any case we'll have to handle the transition manually, but it's good if we manage to drop all the delta.
I think we can actually make liburing a sync. AIUI the Ubuntu delta is all about fixing a FTBFS with ftbfs with glibc 2.34 and fixing autopkgtest test failures.
The FTBFS seems to be gone as I built the Debian package in a Jammy PPA (with -proposed enabled) on all the supported architectures, with no problems:
https:/ /launchpad. net/~paride/ +archive/ ubuntu/ liburing- 2.1-2
The autopkgtest are also all passing:
$ autopkgtest --add-apt- source= {deb,deb- src}' [trusted=yes] http:// ppa.launchpad. net/paride/ liburing- 2.1-2/ubuntu jammy main' -U --no-built-binaries liburing -- qemu ~/ubuntu/ autopkgtest- images/ autopkgtest- jammy-amd64. img
autopkgtest [17:49:42]: @@@@@@@ @@@@@@@ @@@@@@ summary
test-build PASS
test-unit PASS
which I kind of expected from the quick look I had to the Debian packaging repository commit history. In any case we'll have to handle the transition manually, but it's good if we manage to drop all the delta.