On 25 May 2011 05:25, Patrick Strasser <patrick.stras...@tugraz.at> wrote:

> Point 3). Still it's too hard for a real novice which would like to help
> to get a bug report not at all out. The starting suggestion for this
> thread was to add an HTTP based transport path to get around the MTA
> thing. In the mid 90ies I was starting with a dial up connection, which
> was expensive, and I was glad that I could queue my outgoing mail and
> have them shipped together. I needed a working MTA in my box. Nowadays
> for me there's no point in having a non-local MTA, I have DSL and alway
> access to my ISPs mail transport system, which means I have direct
> access to BTS.
>
> I just second the proposal to have a backup to the mail transport in
> form of a HTTP or some other direct connection transport. Nothing more.
> Mail is fine, having a backup is even better.
>
>
Personally I have many Debian desktops and servers under my control. Some of
them on private networks without public FQDN. Some of them laptops, which
never plugged into the same network, and as such need a different SMTP setup
everytime. Some don't even have Internet access.

It is impossible for me to recall which ones have working MTAs, working
reportbug SMTP configurations, etc. reportbug needs to be run from the
system that encountered the problem or it will generate bad debugging
information. When I encounter a bug somewhere, if I get side tracked trying
to test my MTA setup on a system that never sends emails under normal
conditions, I will run out of time to fill a quality bug report. Or maybe
the bug is with the MTA I am trying to configure.

It has happened that I have submitted quality bug reports, only to find they
go down a black hole, never to be seen again. The fact the BTS takes a while
to respond doesn't help. Sure, maybe this was due to an invalid From address
or something, would rather focus on submitting a good quality bug report
rather then debug my MTA setup for a computer that normally never sends
email however.

As a result, I often end up sending bug reports by hand, using my email
client.

Also a good quality web interface gives immediate feedback that (a) the
command has been processed, (b) validates the command immediately and (c)
outputs the results of the command. None of this resubmitting email after
email after email (with considerable delay between each email waiting
response) to cont...@bugs.debian.org trying to get a simple reassign command
to do the right thing.

Sure, maybe if you are a heavy user of the BTS, these issues won't apply; as
a light/occasional user however I find I am spending more time trying to use
the BTS then being able to file/manipulate bugs in the BTS.
-- 
Brian May <br...@microcomaustralia.com.au>

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