Hi, I want to hear your opinion about the following question: If you think a bug does not belong to your package, do you think it is your duty as a maintainer to reassign to bug to the package it belongs to or do you think just closing the bug is fine?
My understanding of handling bugs is that a bug report has to stay open as long as the problem exists. If I'm positive that the problem does not belong to my package but I have no idea which package is really causing the problem I just ask for help here to do a proper reassignment. On Tue, 8 Apr 2008 I filed #474964 against linux-2.6: Loads pcspkr and others even if explicitely excluded in modprobe.conf On Wed, 9 Apr 2008 07:59:48 GMT, Debian Bug Tracking System wrote:
... It has been closed by maximilian attems <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>. closing as not a kernel bug anyway.
On Wed, 09 Apr 2008 09:57:03 GMT I reopened asking for proper reassigning. On Wed, 09 Apr 2008 10:12:05 GMT another attempt to close this bug was done by "Bastian Blank" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> On Thu, 10 Apr 2008 06:24:02 GMT I played another Ping in the funny Ping-Pong-game. Obviosely kernel maintainers lost their interest in this little game and seem to ignore the bug from now on. Well, I for myself know how to work around problems of this kind. I have no trouble to kick the unwanted modules out anyhow. But I thought our users deserve a system that works as it is described in the docs and I feel the kernel team considers reassigning boring enough to refuse to do this. If anybody would confirm that this problem might belong to module-init-tools I would volunteer to take over the job of proper reassignment - but I just don't know exactly and "my experts in questions like this" just refuse proper communication. Kind regards Andreas. -- http://fam-tille.de -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]