Hi, (I just got the mails to utnubu-discuss, so bear with me)
Am Donnerstag, den 15.12.2005, 15:39 +0100 schrieb Sven Luther: > The process was to be manually though, the idea is to scan incoming mails to > the BTS, which would notice an URL to an ubuntu patch, and auto-attach it (and > complain loudly to the submitter if the URL is bogus :). Sounds like a nice > idea in need of someone implementing it. I don't think there is much gain - an attached patch is not much better than a link, and might annoy people with limited bandwidth. But maybe this derived idea is some good: How about looking through the repository of ubuntu pachtes (aka people.u.c/~scott/patches) and make sure a link to it is sent to the approriate [EMAIL PROTECTED] Sounds like a very good idea, and fully in the scope of Utnubu. Some questions: * Is it common to refer to debian bug numbers in ubuntu patches * Is this done in a unambigous way (like in debian/changelogs) * How big are the chances that an automatic script with get the bug number wrong or mistake another number for a bug number If the answers are not too bad, this could be implemented by Utnubu (we pull the complete patches tree every day anyways) Greetings, Joachim -- Joachim "nomeata" Breitner Debian Developer [EMAIL PROTECTED] | ICQ# 74513189 | GPG-Keyid: 4743206C JID: [EMAIL PROTECTED] | http://people.debian.org/~nomeata -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]