Hi, When I sent the patch adding matterbridge to Guix, I only notified that I didn't know if it contained vendored code or not at the last moment (after the patch was sent, during the discussion about it, and before it was merged). The issue is that I didn't know go at all and more specifically I didn't know its the compilation system worked. So I managed to create a package for matterbridge by looking at how it was done for other go packages. After learning more about how go compilation worked, I found out that matterbridge contained a lot of vendored code. And Guix explicitly wants to avoid bundles code. In the "16.6 Submitting Patches" section of the manual[1], we have: > 6. Make sure the package does not use bundled copies of software > already available as separate packages. And here while most dependencies are not already packaged, some are, and I guess that I should read between the lines and conclude that all the matterbridge dependencies should rather be packaged. So the question is what should we do about that. As I understand with the go build system, or you vendor all dependencies, or you vendor none, and I've not yet managed to find a way to workaround that yet in Guix (to do a progressive unvendoring). So instead I've started working on unvendoring matterbridge[2] completely, but if we go this route, there are more than 500 dependencies. To do that I first used the following command: guix import go -r github.com/42wim/matterbridge I then started looking at each package definition that Guix didn't manage to detect the license of, and I read the licenses to find if they were free software. All the licenses I read were FSDG compliant. Usually they had some extra text indicating the provenance of the code or they would have multiple free software licenses. Then I started adding packages for the dependencies that guix import go didn't manage to find. Theses are repositories that are being forked from the official ones for a reason or another. I've not finished that yet, but I still think it was a good idea to open a bug report as I've now more understanding of the problem. Given the huge amount of dependencies I was wondering what was the best approach here: - Would it makes sense to remove matterbridge from Guix, or should we fix it instead? - If we fix it by packaging each dependencies, would it be ok if that is done step by step, like if dependencies are packaged and patches for them are sent, without necessarily a way to seriously test if the packaged dependency work until they are used by other software (like matterbridge)? Also when I'll manage to update matterbridge[3] how should we deal with such amount of packages? Would I need to send one (generated) patch for the upgrade of each package? I also guess that sticking as much as possible to what Guix import go generates would help in situations like that as it would make the maintenance faster. References: ----------- [1]https://guix.gnu.org/manual/en/guix.html#Submitting-Patches [2]https://git.replicant.us/contrib/GNUtoo/infrastructure/guix/log/?h=matterbridge-unvendor [3]Right now there is a compilation issue that I didn't manage to fix, even with help from #guix). Denis.