On Thu, 27 Oct 2005, Thomas Bushnell BSG wrote: > Henrique de Moraes Holschuh <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > > But at least we know that this subthread can end right here, right now. It > > is useless to discuss beliefs that exist without a technical backing, and I > > won't waste my time with it. > > Do you have a technical backing for your view that it is useless to > discuss beliefs that one?
Parse error: "... that one?" I am sorry, I am not sure I understood what you mean. IF I got it right, my reply is simple: I will not change my mind about a technical matter backed by technical reasons, because of the beliefs of someone else. Give me technical reasons, and I will listen and I could be convinced that I am wrong. Therefore, I will not waste my time with any thread where I ask for technical reasons and get an ideologic one as a reply. And I won't waste my time arguing for the sake of arguing, either. As for the technical reasons to update and modify past entries in a changelog, I can name a few without any effort: 1. Fixing typos do not change the message. If it does, it is not a simple typo. Typos can cause a grep for information to fail, thus they are not always harmless. Typos distract me, therefore I fix them on *my* changelogs when I notice them, so that they won't distract me ever again. 2. By properly updating/fixing closes: entries, one can always machine-parse the changelog to locate exactly when a bug was fixed. I can use this to feed the new version-aware BTS with missing versioning information, for example, if I need/want to. Also, by adding the proper closes: entries in the changelog, now I have a link to the BTS entry that is related to that changelog entry. This data is extremely useful when you are hunting the reasons for a particular change down. 3. The security team's work is helped by adding the CVE information to the proper changelog entry, to the point that they have requested everyone to do so. This requires editing past changelog entries quite often. -- "One disk to rule them all, One disk to find them. One disk to bring them all and in the darkness grind them. In the Land of Redmond where the shadows lie." -- The Silicon Valley Tarot Henrique Holschuh -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]