On March 29, 2018 1:16:31 PM UTC, Ian Campbell <i...@debian.org> wrote: >On Thu, 2018-03-29 at 14:02 +0100, Ian Jackson wrote: >> Don Armstrong writes ("Re: interpretation of wontfix"): >> > 2) wontfix+help: this bug requires too much effort to fix, so I >won't be >> > working on it, but patches will be accepted. >> >> I dislike the use of "help" in this context. If the maintainers >think >> the bug is not worth their *own* time, it seems perverse for the >> maintainers to set a tag which suggests to other contributors that >> they should spend *their* time on it. > >The case which caused this thread was[0] "maintainer does not have the >time/inclination to investigate/fix bugs on this non-release >architecture", the implication being that "the porters of that arch >should deal with this bug and provide a patch which the maintainer will >evaluate". > >To that end perhaps this is a special enough case of "help" that a >specific "porter" tag is warranted? (or perhaps a set of "porter-ARCH" >tags or a combination of "porter" and "ARCH" tags, or whatever). In >fact I don't see why we would limit it to non-release arches, it seems >useful for release arches too. > >Or perhaps this just needs a consensus on the appropriate use of some >`p...@debian.org` usertags? > >Ian. > >[0] approximately and appologies if I've grossly mischaracterized this.
Personally, I find the "I don't think it's worth the effort, but if you think it is, I'll accept a patch" case to be reasonably common. I don't think it's about power. I think it's about different priorities and perspectives. Scott K