On 01/23/2014 04:27 PM, Rahul Sundaram wrote:
Hi
On Thu, Jan 23, 2014 at 11:08 AM, "Jóhann B. Guðmundsson" wrote:
On 01/23/2014 03:55 PM, Matthew Miller wrote:
> >So, one possibility would be to move
less-maintained packages to a separate
> >repository tree still included as Fedora and
enabled by default
>That wont reduce the bugs reported against it...
That's not necessarily bad. And by categorizing those bugs
separately, it
would be easier to treat them differently.
We dont want QA community members testers/reporters/triagers ( and
general end users ) wasting their contributed time reporting bugs
that wont get fixed.
Who is we?
Obviously not you...
Just because upstream is inactive doesn't mean that there are bugs and
just because upstream is inactive doesn't mean package maintainers
won't fix bug reports.
If a package maintainer fixes bug the package is no longer inactive
since it's being actively maintained which is what matters regardless if
upstream or just downstream with us...
Quite frankly it amazes me how much people put themselves on a pedestole
for maintaining a component in a distribution and at the same time
either fail to understand or simply disregard the time,resources and
scope the service sub-community as well as feature owners have to put
into that component.
QA/Releng/Infra/Doc all have to spend contributed time and resources
into that same component for the duration of the lifetime of the
component in the distribution which more often than not, is long time
after it's maintainer has "vanished" or the component simply is no
longer being maintained downstream/upstream...
And all of the above is *beside* the negative effect such components
have on end users that expect it to work since it's available to them
through an application installer of any kind.
How much time would it have saved Richard not having to go through those
dead or semi-dead components and how willing do you think people are
jumping to assist him when they know there is 40% that the time they are
contribute to that work will be for nothing since those app apps are
dead or semi-dead upstream?
To me this is pure community resources leakage due to distribution
litterers with the mentality of packaging *everything* regardless if
upstream is dead or not because it works for *them*.
JBG
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