Activity log for bug #2070025

Date Who What changed Old value New value Message
2024-06-21 09:13:51 Sebastien Bacher bug added bug
2024-06-21 09:15:17 Sebastien Bacher bug added subscriber MIR approval team
2024-06-21 18:14:14 Jeremy Bícha description [Availability] The package wsdd is already in Ubuntu universe. The package wsdd build for the architectures it is designed to work on. It currently builds and works for architectures: amd64 as a python arch-all package Link to package https://launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/wsdd [Rationale] - The package wsdd is required in Ubuntu main for enabling win10 shares discovery in nautilus. - The package wsdd will generally be useful for a large part of our user base - There is no other/better way to solve this that is already in main or should go universe->main instead of this. - The binary package wssd needs to be in main to achieve shares enumeration in gvfs/nautilus. We don't plan to install wssd-server which will stay in universe. - The package wsdd is required in Ubuntu main no later than August 15th due to Oracular feature freeze. [Security] - No CVEs/security issues in this software in the past - no `suid` or `sgid` binaries - no executables in `/sbin` and `/usr/sbin` - Package does install an user service which is going to be started by the corresponding gvfs backend - Package does not install services, timers or recurring jobs - Packages does not open privileged ports (ports < 1024). - Package does not expose any external endpoints - Packages does not contain extensions to security-sensitive software [Quality assurance - function/usage] - The package works well right after install [Quality assurance - maintenance] - The package is maintained well in Debian/Ubuntu/Upstream and does only has a wishlist request open in Debian and minor bugs upstream - Ubuntu https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/wsdd/+bug - Debian https://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/pkgreport.cgi?src=wsdd - Upstream's bug tracker, https://github.com/christgau/wsdd/issues - The package has no important open bugs - The package does not deal with exotic hardware we cannot support [Quality assurance - testing] TOFIX: we need to enable the upstream tests as part of the package build TODO-A: - The package runs a test suite on build time, if it fails TODO-A: it makes the build fail, link to build log TBD TODO-B: - The package does not run a test at build time because TBD TOFIX: we need to enable some autopkgtests TODO-A: - The package runs an autopkgtest, and is currently passing on TODO-A: this TBD list of architectures, link to test logs TBD TODO-B: - The package does not run an autopkgtest because TBD TODO-A: - The package does have not failing autopkgtests right now TODO-B: - The package does have failing autopkgtests tests right now, but since TODO-B: they always failed they are handled as "ignored failure", this is TODO-B: ok because TBD [Quality assurance - packaging] TOFIX: write a debian/watch for the package TODO-A: - debian/watch is present and works TODO-B: - debian/watch is not present, instead it has TBD TODO-C: - debian/watch is not present because it is a native package - debian/control has a valid Maintainer definition - This package only has minor lintian warnings # lintian --pedantic wsdd_0.8-1_amd64.changes W: wsdd: groff-message troff:<standard input>:145: error: character '*' is not allowed as a starting delimiter [usr/share/man/man1/wsdd.1.gz:1] W: wsdd: groff-message troff:<standard input>:145: error: character '*' is not allowed as a starting delimiter [usr/share/man/man1/wsdd.1.gz:2] P: wsdd source: package-uses-old-debhelper-compat-version 11 P: wsdd source: trailing-whitespace [debian/control:55] P: wsdd source: trailing-whitespace [debian/control:5] P: wsdd source: trailing-whitespace [debian/rules:31] P: wsdd source: uses-debhelper-compat-file [debian/compat] - Lintian overrides are not present - This package does not rely on obsolete or about to be demoted packages. - This package has no python2 or GTK2 dependencies - The package will be installed by default, but does not ask debconf questions - Packaging and build is easy, https://salsa.debian.org/grantma/wsdd/-/blob/master/debian/rules [UI standards] - Application is not end-user facing (does not need translation) [Dependencies] - No further depends or recommends dependencies that are not yet in main [Standards compliance] - This package correctly follows FHS and Debian Policy [Maintenance/Owner] - The owning team will be desktop-packages and I have their acknowledgement for that commitment - The future owning team is already subscribed to the package - This does not use static builds - This does not use vendored code - This package is not rust based - The package has been built in the archive more recently than the last test rebuild [Background information] The Package description explains the package well Upstream Name is wsdd Link to upstream project https://github.com/christgau/wsdd [Availability] The package wsdd is already in Ubuntu universe. The package wsdd build for the architectures it is designed to work on. It currently builds and works for architectures: amd64 as a python arch-all package Link to package https://launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/wsdd [Rationale] - The package wsdd is required in Ubuntu main for enabling win10 shares discovery in nautilus. - The package wsdd will generally be useful for a large part of our user base - There is no other/better way to solve this that is already in main or   should go universe->main instead of this. - The binary package wssd needs to be in main to achieve shares enumeration in gvfs/nautilus. We don't plan to install wsdd-server which will stay in universe. - The package wsdd is required in Ubuntu main no later than August 15th due to Oracular feature freeze. [Security] - No CVEs/security issues in this software in the past - no `suid` or `sgid` binaries - no executables in `/sbin` and `/usr/sbin` - Package does install an user service which is going to be started by the corresponding gvfs backend - Package does not install services, timers or recurring jobs - Packages does not open privileged ports (ports < 1024). - Package does not expose any external endpoints - Packages does not contain extensions to security-sensitive software [Quality assurance - function/usage] - The package works well right after install [Quality assurance - maintenance] - The package is maintained well in Debian/Ubuntu/Upstream and does   only has a wishlist request open in Debian and minor bugs upstream   - Ubuntu https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/wsdd/+bug   - Debian https://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/pkgreport.cgi?src=wsdd   - Upstream's bug tracker, https://github.com/christgau/wsdd/issues - The package has no important open bugs - The package does not deal with exotic hardware we cannot support [Quality assurance - testing] - The package runs a test suite on build time, if it fails it makes the build fail, link to build log 1ubuntu1 TOFIX: we need to enable some autopkgtests TODO-A: - The package runs an autopkgtest, and is currently passing on TODO-A: this TBD list of architectures, link to test logs TBD TODO-B: - The package does not run an autopkgtest because TBD TODO-A: - The package does have not failing autopkgtests right now TODO-B: - The package does have failing autopkgtests tests right now, but since TODO-B: they always failed they are handled as "ignored failure", this is TODO-B: ok because TBD [Quality assurance - packaging] TOFIX: write a debian/watch for the package TODO-A: - debian/watch is present and works TODO-B: - debian/watch is not present, instead it has TBD TODO-C: - debian/watch is not present because it is a native package - debian/control has a valid Maintainer definition - This package only has minor lintian warnings # lintian --pedantic wsdd_0.8-1_amd64.changes W: wsdd: groff-message troff:<standard input>:145: error: character '*' is not allowed as a starting delimiter [usr/share/man/man1/wsdd.1.gz:1] W: wsdd: groff-message troff:<standard input>:145: error: character '*' is not allowed as a starting delimiter [usr/share/man/man1/wsdd.1.gz:2] P: wsdd source: package-uses-old-debhelper-compat-version 11 P: wsdd source: trailing-whitespace [debian/control:55] P: wsdd source: trailing-whitespace [debian/control:5] P: wsdd source: trailing-whitespace [debian/rules:31] P: wsdd source: uses-debhelper-compat-file [debian/compat] - Lintian overrides are not present - This package does not rely on obsolete or about to be demoted packages. - This package has no python2 or GTK2 dependencies - The package will be installed by default, but does not ask debconf questions - Packaging and build is easy, https://salsa.debian.org/grantma/wsdd/-/blob/master/debian/rules [UI standards] - Application is not end-user facing (does not need translation) [Dependencies] - No further depends or recommends dependencies that are not yet in main [Standards compliance] - This package correctly follows FHS and Debian Policy [Maintenance/Owner] - The owning team will be desktop-packages and I have their acknowledgement for that commitment - The future owning team is already subscribed to the package - This does not use static builds - This does not use vendored code - This package is not rust based - The package has been built in the archive more recently than the last test rebuild [Background information] The Package description explains the package well Upstream Name is wsdd Link to upstream project https://github.com/christgau/wsdd
2024-06-21 23:12:19 Launchpad Janitor wsdd (Ubuntu): status New Fix Released
2024-06-24 09:30:44 Sebastien Bacher wsdd (Ubuntu): status Fix Released New
2024-06-24 10:17:59 Christian Ehrhardt  wsdd (Ubuntu): assignee Christian Ehrhardt  (paelzer)
2024-06-25 11:23:03 Christian Ehrhardt  bug watch added https://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=1073265
2024-06-25 11:23:14 Christian Ehrhardt  wsdd (Ubuntu): assignee Christian Ehrhardt  (paelzer) Ubuntu Security Team (ubuntu-security)
2024-06-25 14:41:14 Seth Arnold tags sec-4626
2024-06-26 08:28:23 Alessandro Astone bug added subscriber Alessandro Astone
2024-06-26 13:30:59 Sebastien Bacher description [Availability] The package wsdd is already in Ubuntu universe. The package wsdd build for the architectures it is designed to work on. It currently builds and works for architectures: amd64 as a python arch-all package Link to package https://launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/wsdd [Rationale] - The package wsdd is required in Ubuntu main for enabling win10 shares discovery in nautilus. - The package wsdd will generally be useful for a large part of our user base - There is no other/better way to solve this that is already in main or   should go universe->main instead of this. - The binary package wssd needs to be in main to achieve shares enumeration in gvfs/nautilus. We don't plan to install wsdd-server which will stay in universe. - The package wsdd is required in Ubuntu main no later than August 15th due to Oracular feature freeze. [Security] - No CVEs/security issues in this software in the past - no `suid` or `sgid` binaries - no executables in `/sbin` and `/usr/sbin` - Package does install an user service which is going to be started by the corresponding gvfs backend - Package does not install services, timers or recurring jobs - Packages does not open privileged ports (ports < 1024). - Package does not expose any external endpoints - Packages does not contain extensions to security-sensitive software [Quality assurance - function/usage] - The package works well right after install [Quality assurance - maintenance] - The package is maintained well in Debian/Ubuntu/Upstream and does   only has a wishlist request open in Debian and minor bugs upstream   - Ubuntu https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/wsdd/+bug   - Debian https://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/pkgreport.cgi?src=wsdd   - Upstream's bug tracker, https://github.com/christgau/wsdd/issues - The package has no important open bugs - The package does not deal with exotic hardware we cannot support [Quality assurance - testing] - The package runs a test suite on build time, if it fails it makes the build fail, link to build log 1ubuntu1 TOFIX: we need to enable some autopkgtests TODO-A: - The package runs an autopkgtest, and is currently passing on TODO-A: this TBD list of architectures, link to test logs TBD TODO-B: - The package does not run an autopkgtest because TBD TODO-A: - The package does have not failing autopkgtests right now TODO-B: - The package does have failing autopkgtests tests right now, but since TODO-B: they always failed they are handled as "ignored failure", this is TODO-B: ok because TBD [Quality assurance - packaging] TOFIX: write a debian/watch for the package TODO-A: - debian/watch is present and works TODO-B: - debian/watch is not present, instead it has TBD TODO-C: - debian/watch is not present because it is a native package - debian/control has a valid Maintainer definition - This package only has minor lintian warnings # lintian --pedantic wsdd_0.8-1_amd64.changes W: wsdd: groff-message troff:<standard input>:145: error: character '*' is not allowed as a starting delimiter [usr/share/man/man1/wsdd.1.gz:1] W: wsdd: groff-message troff:<standard input>:145: error: character '*' is not allowed as a starting delimiter [usr/share/man/man1/wsdd.1.gz:2] P: wsdd source: package-uses-old-debhelper-compat-version 11 P: wsdd source: trailing-whitespace [debian/control:55] P: wsdd source: trailing-whitespace [debian/control:5] P: wsdd source: trailing-whitespace [debian/rules:31] P: wsdd source: uses-debhelper-compat-file [debian/compat] - Lintian overrides are not present - This package does not rely on obsolete or about to be demoted packages. - This package has no python2 or GTK2 dependencies - The package will be installed by default, but does not ask debconf questions - Packaging and build is easy, https://salsa.debian.org/grantma/wsdd/-/blob/master/debian/rules [UI standards] - Application is not end-user facing (does not need translation) [Dependencies] - No further depends or recommends dependencies that are not yet in main [Standards compliance] - This package correctly follows FHS and Debian Policy [Maintenance/Owner] - The owning team will be desktop-packages and I have their acknowledgement for that commitment - The future owning team is already subscribed to the package - This does not use static builds - This does not use vendored code - This package is not rust based - The package has been built in the archive more recently than the last test rebuild [Background information] The Package description explains the package well Upstream Name is wsdd Link to upstream project https://github.com/christgau/wsdd [Availability] The package wsdd is already in Ubuntu universe. The package wsdd build for the architectures it is designed to work on. It currently builds and works for architectures: amd64 as a python arch-all package Link to package https://launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/wsdd [Rationale] - The package wsdd is required in Ubuntu main for enabling win10 shares discovery in nautilus. - The package wsdd will generally be useful for a large part of our user base - There is no other/better way to solve this that is already in main or   should go universe->main instead of this. - The binary package wssd needs to be in main to achieve shares enumeration in gvfs/nautilus. We don't plan to install wsdd-server which will stay in universe. - The package wsdd is required in Ubuntu main no later than August 15th due to Oracular feature freeze. [Security] - No CVEs/security issues in this software in the past - no `suid` or `sgid` binaries - no executables in `/sbin` and `/usr/sbin` - Package does install an user service which is going to be started by the corresponding gvfs backend - Package does not install services, timers or recurring jobs - Packages does not open privileged ports (ports < 1024). - Package does not expose any external endpoints - Packages does not contain extensions to security-sensitive software [Quality assurance - function/usage] - The package works well right after install [Quality assurance - maintenance] - The package is maintained well in Debian/Ubuntu/Upstream and does   only has a wishlist request open in Debian and minor bugs upstream   - Ubuntu https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/wsdd/+bug   - Debian https://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/pkgreport.cgi?src=wsdd   - Upstream's bug tracker, https://github.com/christgau/wsdd/issues - The package has no important open bugs - The package does not deal with exotic hardware we cannot support [Quality assurance - testing] - The package runs a test suite on build time, if it fails it makes the build fail, link to build log 1ubuntu1 TOFIX: we need to enable some autopkgtests TODO-A: - The package runs an autopkgtest, and is currently passing on TODO-A: this TBD list of architectures, link to test logs TBD TODO-B: - The package does not run an autopkgtest because TBD TODO-A: - The package does have not failing autopkgtests right now TODO-B: - The package does have failing autopkgtests tests right now, but since TODO-B: they always failed they are handled as "ignored failure", this is TODO-B: ok because TBD [Quality assurance - packaging] - debian/watch is present and works - debian/control has a valid Maintainer definition - This package has no lintian warnings - Lintian overrides are not present - This package does not rely on obsolete or about to be demoted packages. - This package has no python2 or GTK2 dependencies - The package will be installed by default, but does not ask debconf questions - Packaging and build is easy, https://salsa.debian.org/grantma/wsdd/-/blob/master/debian/rules [UI standards] - Application is not end-user facing (does not need translation) [Dependencies] - No further depends or recommends dependencies that are not yet in main [Standards compliance] - This package correctly follows FHS and Debian Policy [Maintenance/Owner] - The owning team will be desktop-packages and I have their acknowledgement for that commitment - The future owning team is already subscribed to the package - This does not use static builds - This does not use vendored code - This package is not rust based - The package has been built in the archive more recently than the last test rebuild [Background information] The Package description explains the package well Upstream Name is wsdd Link to upstream project https://github.com/christgau/wsdd
2024-06-26 13:53:15 Sebastien Bacher description [Availability] The package wsdd is already in Ubuntu universe. The package wsdd build for the architectures it is designed to work on. It currently builds and works for architectures: amd64 as a python arch-all package Link to package https://launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/wsdd [Rationale] - The package wsdd is required in Ubuntu main for enabling win10 shares discovery in nautilus. - The package wsdd will generally be useful for a large part of our user base - There is no other/better way to solve this that is already in main or   should go universe->main instead of this. - The binary package wssd needs to be in main to achieve shares enumeration in gvfs/nautilus. We don't plan to install wsdd-server which will stay in universe. - The package wsdd is required in Ubuntu main no later than August 15th due to Oracular feature freeze. [Security] - No CVEs/security issues in this software in the past - no `suid` or `sgid` binaries - no executables in `/sbin` and `/usr/sbin` - Package does install an user service which is going to be started by the corresponding gvfs backend - Package does not install services, timers or recurring jobs - Packages does not open privileged ports (ports < 1024). - Package does not expose any external endpoints - Packages does not contain extensions to security-sensitive software [Quality assurance - function/usage] - The package works well right after install [Quality assurance - maintenance] - The package is maintained well in Debian/Ubuntu/Upstream and does   only has a wishlist request open in Debian and minor bugs upstream   - Ubuntu https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/wsdd/+bug   - Debian https://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/pkgreport.cgi?src=wsdd   - Upstream's bug tracker, https://github.com/christgau/wsdd/issues - The package has no important open bugs - The package does not deal with exotic hardware we cannot support [Quality assurance - testing] - The package runs a test suite on build time, if it fails it makes the build fail, link to build log 1ubuntu1 TOFIX: we need to enable some autopkgtests TODO-A: - The package runs an autopkgtest, and is currently passing on TODO-A: this TBD list of architectures, link to test logs TBD TODO-B: - The package does not run an autopkgtest because TBD TODO-A: - The package does have not failing autopkgtests right now TODO-B: - The package does have failing autopkgtests tests right now, but since TODO-B: they always failed they are handled as "ignored failure", this is TODO-B: ok because TBD [Quality assurance - packaging] - debian/watch is present and works - debian/control has a valid Maintainer definition - This package has no lintian warnings - Lintian overrides are not present - This package does not rely on obsolete or about to be demoted packages. - This package has no python2 or GTK2 dependencies - The package will be installed by default, but does not ask debconf questions - Packaging and build is easy, https://salsa.debian.org/grantma/wsdd/-/blob/master/debian/rules [UI standards] - Application is not end-user facing (does not need translation) [Dependencies] - No further depends or recommends dependencies that are not yet in main [Standards compliance] - This package correctly follows FHS and Debian Policy [Maintenance/Owner] - The owning team will be desktop-packages and I have their acknowledgement for that commitment - The future owning team is already subscribed to the package - This does not use static builds - This does not use vendored code - This package is not rust based - The package has been built in the archive more recently than the last test rebuild [Background information] The Package description explains the package well Upstream Name is wsdd Link to upstream project https://github.com/christgau/wsdd [Availability] The package wsdd is already in Ubuntu universe. The package wsdd build for the architectures it is designed to work on. It currently builds and works for architectures: amd64 as a python arch-all package Link to package https://launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/wsdd [Rationale] - The package wsdd is required in Ubuntu main for enabling win10 shares discovery in nautilus. - The package wsdd will generally be useful for a large part of our user base - There is no other/better way to solve this that is already in main or   should go universe->main instead of this. - The binary package wssd needs to be in main to achieve shares enumeration in gvfs/nautilus. We don't plan to install wsdd-server which will stay in universe. - The package wsdd is required in Ubuntu main no later than August 15th due to Oracular feature freeze. [Security] - No CVEs/security issues in this software in the past - no `suid` or `sgid` binaries - no executables in `/sbin` and `/usr/sbin` - Package does install an user service which is going to be started by the corresponding gvfs backend - Package does not install services, timers or recurring jobs - Packages does not open privileged ports (ports < 1024). - Package does not expose any external endpoints - Packages does not contain extensions to security-sensitive software [Quality assurance - function/usage] - The package works well right after install [Quality assurance - maintenance] - The package is maintained well in Debian/Ubuntu/Upstream and does   only has a wishlist request open in Debian and minor bugs upstream   - Ubuntu https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/wsdd/+bug   - Debian https://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/pkgreport.cgi?src=wsdd   - Upstream's bug tracker, https://github.com/christgau/wsdd/issues - The package has no important open bugs - The package does not deal with exotic hardware we cannot support [Quality assurance - testing] - The package runs a test suite on build time, if it fails it makes the build fail, link to build log 1ubuntu1 TOFIX: we need to enable some autopkgtests TODO-A: - The package runs an autopkgtest, and is currently passing on TODO-A: this TBD list of architectures, link to test logs TBD TODO-B: - The package does not run an autopkgtest because TBD TODO-A: - The package does have not failing autopkgtests right now TODO-B: - The package does have failing autopkgtests tests right now, but since TODO-B: they always failed they are handled as "ignored failure", this is TODO-B: ok because TBD [Quality assurance - packaging] - debian/watch is present and works - debian/control has a valid Maintainer definition - This package has no lintian warnings - Lintian overrides are not present - This package does not rely on obsolete or about to be demoted packages. - This package has no python2 or GTK2 dependencies - The package will be installed by default, but does not ask debconf questions - Packaging and build is easy, https://salsa.debian.org/grantma/wsdd/-/blob/master/debian/rules [UI standards] - Application is not end-user facing (does not need translation) [Dependencies] - No further depends or recommends dependencies that are not yet in main [Standards compliance] - This package correctly follows FHS and Debian Policy [Maintenance/Owner] - The owning team will be desktop-packages and I have their acknowledgement for that commitment - The future owning team is already subscribed to the package - This does not use static builds - This does not use vendored code - This package is not rust based - The package has been built in the archive more recently than the last test rebuild [Background information] The Package description explains the package well Upstream Name is wsdd Link to upstream project https://github.com/christgau/wsdd The desktop integration is done via a gvfs service (/usr/libexec/gvfsd-wsdd), which is already enabled in the Noble package but requires the wsdd backend to be installed to do anything. The backend was added in https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gvfs/-/merge_requests/186 The shares listed by that services are added to the network backend and listed in the corresponding nautilus section (in the 'other locations' entry of the sidebar)
2024-06-26 14:41:56 Sebastien Bacher description [Availability] The package wsdd is already in Ubuntu universe. The package wsdd build for the architectures it is designed to work on. It currently builds and works for architectures: amd64 as a python arch-all package Link to package https://launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/wsdd [Rationale] - The package wsdd is required in Ubuntu main for enabling win10 shares discovery in nautilus. - The package wsdd will generally be useful for a large part of our user base - There is no other/better way to solve this that is already in main or   should go universe->main instead of this. - The binary package wssd needs to be in main to achieve shares enumeration in gvfs/nautilus. We don't plan to install wsdd-server which will stay in universe. - The package wsdd is required in Ubuntu main no later than August 15th due to Oracular feature freeze. [Security] - No CVEs/security issues in this software in the past - no `suid` or `sgid` binaries - no executables in `/sbin` and `/usr/sbin` - Package does install an user service which is going to be started by the corresponding gvfs backend - Package does not install services, timers or recurring jobs - Packages does not open privileged ports (ports < 1024). - Package does not expose any external endpoints - Packages does not contain extensions to security-sensitive software [Quality assurance - function/usage] - The package works well right after install [Quality assurance - maintenance] - The package is maintained well in Debian/Ubuntu/Upstream and does   only has a wishlist request open in Debian and minor bugs upstream   - Ubuntu https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/wsdd/+bug   - Debian https://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/pkgreport.cgi?src=wsdd   - Upstream's bug tracker, https://github.com/christgau/wsdd/issues - The package has no important open bugs - The package does not deal with exotic hardware we cannot support [Quality assurance - testing] - The package runs a test suite on build time, if it fails it makes the build fail, link to build log 1ubuntu1 TOFIX: we need to enable some autopkgtests TODO-A: - The package runs an autopkgtest, and is currently passing on TODO-A: this TBD list of architectures, link to test logs TBD TODO-B: - The package does not run an autopkgtest because TBD TODO-A: - The package does have not failing autopkgtests right now TODO-B: - The package does have failing autopkgtests tests right now, but since TODO-B: they always failed they are handled as "ignored failure", this is TODO-B: ok because TBD [Quality assurance - packaging] - debian/watch is present and works - debian/control has a valid Maintainer definition - This package has no lintian warnings - Lintian overrides are not present - This package does not rely on obsolete or about to be demoted packages. - This package has no python2 or GTK2 dependencies - The package will be installed by default, but does not ask debconf questions - Packaging and build is easy, https://salsa.debian.org/grantma/wsdd/-/blob/master/debian/rules [UI standards] - Application is not end-user facing (does not need translation) [Dependencies] - No further depends or recommends dependencies that are not yet in main [Standards compliance] - This package correctly follows FHS and Debian Policy [Maintenance/Owner] - The owning team will be desktop-packages and I have their acknowledgement for that commitment - The future owning team is already subscribed to the package - This does not use static builds - This does not use vendored code - This package is not rust based - The package has been built in the archive more recently than the last test rebuild [Background information] The Package description explains the package well Upstream Name is wsdd Link to upstream project https://github.com/christgau/wsdd The desktop integration is done via a gvfs service (/usr/libexec/gvfsd-wsdd), which is already enabled in the Noble package but requires the wsdd backend to be installed to do anything. The backend was added in https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gvfs/-/merge_requests/186 The shares listed by that services are added to the network backend and listed in the corresponding nautilus section (in the 'other locations' entry of the sidebar) [Availability] The package wsdd is already in Ubuntu universe. The package wsdd build for the architectures it is designed to work on. It currently builds and works for architectures: amd64 as a python arch-all package Link to package https://launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/wsdd [Rationale] - The package wsdd is required in Ubuntu main for enabling win10 shares discovery in nautilus. - The package wsdd will generally be useful for a large part of our user base - There is no other/better way to solve this that is already in main or   should go universe->main instead of this. - The binary package wssd needs to be in main to achieve shares enumeration in gvfs/nautilus. We don't plan to install wsdd-server which will stay in universe. - The package wsdd is required in Ubuntu main no later than August 15th due to Oracular feature freeze. [Security] - No CVEs/security issues in this software in the past - no `suid` or `sgid` binaries - no executables in `/sbin` and `/usr/sbin` - Package does install an user service which is going to be started by the corresponding gvfs backend - Package does not install services, timers or recurring jobs - Packages does not open privileged ports (ports < 1024). - Package does not expose any external endpoints - Packages does not contain extensions to security-sensitive software [Quality assurance - function/usage] - The package works well right after install [Quality assurance - maintenance] - The package is maintained well in Debian/Ubuntu/Upstream and does   only has a wishlist request open in Debian and minor bugs upstream   - Ubuntu https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/wsdd/+bug   - Debian https://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/pkgreport.cgi?src=wsdd   - Upstream's bug tracker, https://github.com/christgau/wsdd/issues - The package has no important open bugs - The package does not deal with exotic hardware we cannot support [Quality assurance - testing] - The package runs a test suite on build time, if it fails it makes the build fail, link to build log 1ubuntu1 - The package runs an autopkgtest, and is currently passing on amd64 arm64 armhf i386 ppc64el s390x https://autopkgtest.ubuntu.com/packages/w/wsdd - The package does have not failing autopkgtests right now [Quality assurance - packaging] - debian/watch is present and works - debian/control has a valid Maintainer definition - This package has no lintian warnings - Lintian overrides are not present - This package does not rely on obsolete or about to be demoted packages. - This package has no python2 or GTK2 dependencies - The package will be installed by default, but does not ask debconf questions - Packaging and build is easy, https://salsa.debian.org/grantma/wsdd/-/blob/master/debian/rules [UI standards] - Application is not end-user facing (does not need translation) [Dependencies] - No further depends or recommends dependencies that are not yet in main [Standards compliance] - This package correctly follows FHS and Debian Policy [Maintenance/Owner] - The owning team will be desktop-packages and I have their acknowledgement for that commitment - The future owning team is already subscribed to the package - This does not use static builds - This does not use vendored code - This package is not rust based - The package has been built in the archive more recently than the last test rebuild [Background information] The Package description explains the package well Upstream Name is wsdd Link to upstream project https://github.com/christgau/wsdd The desktop integration is done via a gvfs service (/usr/libexec/gvfsd-wsdd), which is already enabled in the Noble package but requires the wsdd backend to be installed to do anything. The backend was added in https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gvfs/-/merge_requests/186 The shares listed by that services are added to the network backend and listed in the corresponding nautilus section (in the 'other locations' entry of the sidebar)