On 2012-04-01, Ralph Goers wrote: > I have real problems with Gump. I find it very difficult to determine > what the problem actually is much less diagnose it. Other than that I > know it is supposed to be using the latest source in trunk it is tough > to figure out how to reproduce a problem as it means manually going to > all the dependencies and building them from trunk and then modifying > poms to use them.
Agreed, but I wouldn't know of a simpler way to do it. In theory you could do a bisect on all changes of all dependencies until you identify the change that introduced a breakage on the Gump side, but that's non-trivial and will likely never happen given the limited development resources at Gump. Of course the process is easier for projects with a small transitive hull of dependencies 8-) > I know its purpose is to try to catch errors early, but it looks to me > like people are just giving up trying to fix them. Frankly, I think > the only reason people do tis to try to stop the emails. I think you are correct. Many projects have stopped seeing value in Gump and only view it as a nuisance (or ignore it), I don't know what to do about it either. Another way to get rid of the emails is to remove the nag element from the Gump descriptor. Stefan --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: dev-unsubscr...@commons.apache.org For additional commands, e-mail: dev-h...@commons.apache.org