>>>>> "Tomas" == Tomas Pospisek <t...@sourcepole.ch> writes:
Tomas> All that said, I have never received negative feedback to Tomas> these bug triages that I am occassionaly doing and am under Tomas> the impression that the maintainers *do* appreciate someone Tomas> going over their packages bugs from time to time and closing Tomas> bugs that to the best of one's judgement will not be taken Tomas> care of any more. Yes, and I certainly value this kind of triage both as a reporter and a maintainer. I think agreeing with both Tomas and Santiago, for me a big factor is the state of the bug. If a bug is waiting for a maintainer, let the maintainer deal with it. Most of us do not prefer to close bugs simply because they are old. But closing bugs with a moreinfo tag when information has not been provided in six months to a year is likely fine. So is asking for more info and adding a moreinfo tag when appropriate. It's even appropriate to ask if the bug still happens. If you have reason to believe it doesn't it is often appropriate to add a moreinfo tag in that situation. And then, on the next pass around if there has been no reply closing it. I think a significant fraction of maintainers frown on the idea of asking if a bug still happens simply because there's a new version and closing on no reply. The difference being whether you have reason to believe the bug might be fixed. I think Ubuntu assumes it probably was and a lot of Debian tends to assume it probably was not. But again, maintainers have a fair bit of flexibility, and the more lightly maintained/closer to salvaging a package is, the more it's appropriate for people doing QA work to get in and apply their own judgment.