Lars Wirzenius wrote: > I'm going to dip my spoon into this soup, because I dislike soup, and > this one especially irks me.
Even ice cream soup? > Reviewing other people's patches in large quantities every day is > something that few people will be happy to do for more than a few > days. After that, they'll figure out that they could be doing > something else, like developing their own software and have someone > else do all the boring, tedious work. .. or giving the patcher a svn commit bit. I tend to do it after 3 or four good patches and a little conversation with most of my packages (and with d-i). Because you're right, there are more interesting things to do than merging patches.. including reading the commit logs of everyone whom I've given commit bits to. ;-) If the patcher is an upstream author of the software in question, I'd pretty much give them a commit bit automatically. However, that in practice rarely happens, I find it more effective to communicate with the upstream, make sure we have a procedure in place to let me know whenever they have a release, and make sure that I am packaging the right releases at the right time. I feel this is my responsibilty as a Debian developer, and if I can't keep up with it it's best to find someone else to maintain that package. -- see shy jo
signature.asc
Description: Digital signature