----- Original Message -----
> On 06/27/2014 08:26 AM, Marcela Mašláňová wrote:
>
> > I'm not sure if it's so great idea for all bugzillas. Some packagers
> > prefer to add patches first into upstream then carry a patch for many
> > releases.
> This consideration actually is pretty much irrelevant when it comes to
> bugs. The only thing that counts is Fedora end-user experience, to whom
> it's quite irrelevant who fixes a bug.
>
> In other words, if bug affects users, these should be fixed in Fedora
> ASAP, no matter how.
That’s only in some ideal case where we can get all the manpower we might need.
Adding a non-upstream patch to a package by a non-owner of the package
essentially commits the owner of the package to either push the patch upstream
or to keep rebasing it on top of the upstream releases; something the package
owner, based on past practice, didn’t sign up for and might never have time for.
It seems strange that we would be willing to impose such non-optional work on a
package owner for a patch someone could have just as well sent upstream, when
we don’t even impose such non-optional work on the package owner for things
they are directly responsible for and have no other upstream, such as updating
the package to follow changes in packaging guidelines.
That’s not to say that Fedora should never have non-upstream patches, nor even
that provenpackagers should never apply non-upstream patches, but
drive-by-patching by people who are not on the hook for long-term mainteinance
should IMHO _strongly_ default to submitting patches upstream first or instead.
Mirek
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