On Thu, 12 Jan 2006 11:17:55 -0200, Gustavo Franco <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> said:
> I disagree with a pile of patches and as i said it would be better a > revision control system and good log (and debian/changelog) entries. How is a revision control system (BTW, all of my packages are in a public repo on arch.debian.org) help much in the way of providing feedback? The best way to work with upstreams is to provide minimal patches that implement a feature, or fix a bug, and preferably, each patch addressing one or few related issues. Calling for revision control systems seems like a red herring -- and is impractical, anyway, since getting upstream to all use the same version control system is not going to work. > We can use PTS (and we're doing already in a way) to be warned about > new patches. I don't think Canonical will put money on judging by > DDs, in the end it's up to us include or not the change. Umm, every single patch in a downstream repo, all jumbled up with other changes, is not much use. I would never subject my upstreams to it -- I submit specific, minimal patches, one feature at a time, to upstream, since that makes it more likely to be integrated. > If they want to promote that they give us something back their > reponsability is keep things more organized (for DDs and NMs) and > publish somewhere what exactly they're giving back (for the > community), IMHO. Does it mean that they're not contributing? No, > they're believe in me. We just need to do our homework, and inform > them that we can do the things in a better way. That is just talk. Actually doing something that establishes the feed back channel would be laudable, mere talk isn't worth spit. manoj -- Now is the time for all good men to come to. Walt Kelly Manoj Srivastava <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> <http://www.debian.org/%7Esrivasta/> 1024D/BF24424C print 4966 F272 D093 B493 410B 924B 21BA DABB BF24 424C -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]