From 6ed0248b72b67e84a4b0b967330d60d759fb32ef Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Chris Lamb Date: Fri, 1 Jul 2016 22:52:20 +0200 Subject: potential -> prospects Signed-off-by: Holger Levsen --- README | 2 +- bin/reproducible_common.sh | 4 ++-- 2 files changed, 3 insertions(+), 3 deletions(-) diff --git a/README b/README index 6c008523..43174edf 100644 --- a/README +++ b/README @@ -133,7 +133,7 @@ Installation tests inside chroot environments. * Several jobs are being used to assemble the website https://tests.reproducible-builds.org which is actually a collection of static html and log files (and very few images) being served from this host. Besides the logfiles data is stored in an SQLite database which can be downloaded from https://tests.reproducible-builds.org/reproducible.db. (That copy is updated every four hours.) -* The (current) purpose of https://tests.reproducible-builds.org is to show the prospects of reproducible builds for Debian - and six other projects currently. This is research, showing what could (and should) be done... check https://wiki.debian.org/ReproducibleBuilds for the real status of the project for Debian! +* The (current) purpose of https://tests.reproducible-builds.org is to show the potential of reproducible builds for Debian - and six other projects currently. This is research, showing what could (and should) be done... check https://wiki.debian.org/ReproducibleBuilds for the real status of the project for Debian! * Currently, three suites are tested on 'amd64', 'i386' and 'armhf' architectures: 'testing', 'unstable' and 'experimental'. The tests are done using 'pbuilder' using link:https://wiki.debian.org/ReproducibleBuilds/ExperimentalToolchain[our toolchain] through concurrent builder jobs, 16 for 'amd64' and 'i386' each, and 57 for 'armhf', which are each constantly testing packages and saving the results of these tests. diff --git a/bin/reproducible_common.sh b/bin/reproducible_common.sh index 9e5f38f2..5e76f925 100755 --- a/bin/reproducible_common.sh +++ b/bin/reproducible_common.sh @@ -309,7 +309,7 @@ write_page_header() { write_page " Also aimed at the free software world at large, is the first specification we have written: the
  • SOURCE_DATE_EPOCH specification
  • ." write_page "" write_page "