On Wed, Mar 28, 2018 at 12:01:19PM +0100, Simon McVittie wrote: > On Wed, 28 Mar 2018 at 12:17:37 +0200, Andreas Tille wrote: > > I think "wontfix" is exactly the feature of the BTS that was invented to > > solve the problem I described. The bug is not closed and remains listed > > - so everybody is free to ignore that tag and close the bug. > > Is this how most people interpret wontfix?
Honestly, I don't know. > I'd usually interpreted it as > an indication of policy rather than priority: "I acknowledge that this > is a bug, but it isn't going to change, even if you provide a patch". I see your point. > For instance, if there's a design flaw that people are now relying on, > such that correcting the design flaw would cause regressions that are > at least as bad as the design flaw itself, then that's an ideal use for > my interpretation of wontfix. > > In Bugzilla, WONTFIX and its cousins NOTABUG and NOTOURBUG are > resolutions, not tags (you use them by closing a bug as RESOLVED WONTFIX > instead of RESOLVED FIXED), which suggests that my interpretation matches > that of Bugzilla's designers; but perhaps the wontfix tag in the Debian > BTS was meant to mean something different? > > I would tend to use the help tag, not the wontfix tag, for bugs where I > don't intend to work on the bug myself but I'd consider applying a patch > (including porting to non-release architectures). When I use the help tag I usually do this together with asking for help say on debian-mentors, upstream or elsewhere. I do not hope that some help just comes from simply setting the tag. I also look into bug reports that I've tagged help from time to time whether some help might have arrived which I could have missed for some reason. I confirm that with your interpretation of wontfix it would be misuse if I would set it in the said case. I checked the doc[1] and while the beginning of the explanation would fit your interpretation it leaves some kind of "open door" for me in the end: "... or possibly for other reasons." I do not want to base my arguing on this last phrase. I was just seeking some practical means to also keep my team mates away who might become attracted by a "help" tag. The three bugs in question that triggered my initial mail kept at least two developers of R packaging team busy and I would love to have some means to prevent this. In case we decide that wontfix is not the right answer for this problem (and I agree with your reasoning) we could possibly invent some "porters" tag or something like this which would probably be the best solution for this problem. Kind regards Andreas. [1] https://www.debian.org/Bugs/Developer.html#tags -- http://fam-tille.de