Le Saturday 25 October 2008 13:41:15 Ulrich Leodolter, vous avez écrit : > On Sat, 2008-10-25 at 11:32 +0200, Kern Sibbald wrote: > > Hello, > > > > For some time now, I haven't really been happy with the Bacula patch > > procedure. Basically, when we fix a bug (either from a bug report or > > ourselves), we usually generate a patch, post it to the bug report, if > > any, and upload it to the Bacula patches area of Source Forge. > > > > Providing you are subscribed to the bugs database and to the > > bacula-patches release notification on Source Forge, you will see these > > patches and can apply them if you deem necessary. > > > > The problems I have with this is that some people may not know about > > patches (we see this in bug reports where a problem is already resolved > > with a patch), and there is no formal mechanism for developers when > > generating a patch. > > > > We already have more work than we can handle, so any change needs to be > > simple and not time consuming for developers, but I am wondering if > > anyone has suggestions how to improve this. I can think of a few: > > > > 1. Change nothing (signing up for bugs and patch notification is already > > not bad). > > 2. Announce patches to the bacula-devel list > > 3. Announce patches to the bacula-devel list and the bacula-users list > > 4. Announce patches to the bacula-announce list as well as the other two > > lists. > > 5. Put patches in the news (time consuming and I doubt that many read > > news). 6. Create an rss feed (I doubt that many users use rss, and this > > also could be time consuming). > > Hello, > > One thing i am missing are patched packages, rpm and also deb packages > have a mechanism to include patch files an apply during build process. > > For most bacula users it would be much easier to apply patches by "rpm > -U ..." or "dpkg install ...".
Yes, but you have to build, test and release a package for each disto after each patch, this is a *huge* amount of work, we have something like 10 patches between two releases. If someone want to build, test and package 10 more often than before for free, no problem, but i prefere spend my time with new features and bugs hunting. > Operating systems like RedHat, CentOS, SLES, Debian, ... are always at > least one step behind last official version. > > An official bacula package repository (yum, apt) would be great. Fedora, debian and ubuntu already provide this kind of repositor, and often, they have a backport branch. > Only Sourcecode an patches are released to sourceforge (maybe win32 > binaries too). > Bye > Best Regards > Ulrich > > > If anyone else has ideas we would like to hear them. > > > > Best regards, > > > > Kern > > ------------------------------------------------------------------------- This SF.Net email is sponsored by the Moblin Your Move Developer's challenge Build the coolest Linux based applications with Moblin SDK & win great prizes Grand prize is a trip for two to an Open Source event anywhere in the world http://moblin-contest.org/redirect.php?banner_id=100&url=/ _______________________________________________ Bacula-users mailing list Bacula-users@lists.sourceforge.net https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/bacula-users