Hello all, I've noticed that the Go (golang) Packaging Guidelines Draft[0] document has been stagnant for a while now and I'm curious what the next steps should be? Does this need to go through FESCo? Also, since Go is statically compiled by default is this something we need to get an exception from FESCo similar to OCaml[1]? Another topic of note is bundled libraries. The upstream Go community seems pretty content with just bundling in their dependencies since it's all statically linked anyways (yes, you can dynamically link with gcc-go but I've yet to find a single project out in community space doing that). For some popular Go projects the dependency list is over 100 deps[2] and are managed with something similar to Godep[3], I'm not sure how realistic it is for packagers to be expected to maintain that many dependencies. This also begs the question that if we do require a packager to maintain them, what happens if another project requires a different version of that dep? (This is similar in nature to what I like to call "ruby bundler hell"). If there were to be some sort of approval for these bundled libraries, should there be a defined specification of which Go dependency managers are supported for sake of security response so that we can check for packages that need rebuilding when a vulnerability is found? What kind of changes would be necessary for build tooling there? (Maybe something in this area I'm not thinking of?) I wanted to at least get this conversation going because it appears there's already a number of Go packages in Fedora at this time without any approved standard and as the language continues to gain popularity I can only assume that number will increase. At the time of this writing, on my laptop running Rawhide: $ dnf search golang | wc -l 279 Thank you, -AdamM [0] - https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/PackagingDrafts/Go [1] - https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Packaging:Guidelines#Programs_which_don.27t_need_to_notify_FESCo [2] - https://github.com/openshift/origin/blob/master/Godeps/Godeps.json [3] - https://github.com/tools/godep -- packaging mailing list packaging@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx https://admin.fedoraproject.org/mailman/listinfo/packaging