▸ quoted from Mark Robson
In <AANLkTikWQAEt8chNwuo2VaQg8+e4ZUy20+_w3WysF_=user-11b03c271d9d@xymon.invalid> Mark Robson <user-659aa876dc82@xymon.invalid> writes:
There are a number of bugs in the Sourceforge bug tracker, is anybody
looking at them? Does anyone triage bugs?
To be honest, I must admit I haven't looked at it for quite some time.
Forgot about it, really.
▸ quoted from Mark Robson
There are also a lot of bugs mentioned on this mailing list, or a long time
ago, which aren't in sourceforge.
Going through the mailing list looking for bug-reports takes a long time.
I have more or less counted upon people to test the current 4.3.0 betas,
and report again if bugs are still present. Not the most user-friendly
way to do things, I agree, but it's the only one that works currently.
Are we going to use SF for this purpose?
There are pros and cons to having a formal bug-tracking system. On the
pro side, it means that bugs are registered centrally so they are more
difficult to forget. On the con side, it means there is a repository
that is separate from the usual support channel - the mailing list -
that I have to check for bug reports. Communicating with people reporting
bugs via the bugtracker is also a bit more bothersome than the normal
mailinglist traffic.
As long as there is effectively only one person doing the support and
bug hunting - yours truly - I don't see any real advantage in using
the SF bugtracker.
▸ quoted from Mark Robson
I'd really like to contribute something to Xymon - I think it's really good
- and want to understand how it's managed.
Hope this gives you an idea :-) It can be made better, surely, so any
help you can provide is welcome.
Regards,
Henrik