John Griffith <[email protected]> writes: > ​Should we just rename this thread to "Sensitivity training for > contributors"?
Culture plays a role in shaping ones expectations here. I was lucky enough to grow up in open source culture, so I can identify an automated response easily and I don't take it too seriously. Not everyone has the same culture and although I agree we need to confront these gaps when they impede us, it's more constructive to reach out and bridge the gap than blame the outsider. James E. Blair said on Tue, Mar 03, 2015 at 07:49:03AM -0800: > If I had to deprioritize something I was working on and it was > auto-abandoned, I would not find out. You should receive messages from Gerrit about this. If you've made the choice to disable or delete those messages, you should expect not to be notified. The review dropping out of your personal dashboard active review queue is a problem though - an email can be forgotten. For what little it's worth, I think having a community-wide definition of inactive and flagging that in the system makes sense. This helps us maintain a clear and consistent policy in our tools. However, I've come around to see that abandon semantics don't fit that flag. We need to narrow in on what inactive really means and what effects the flag should have. We may need two flags, one for 'needs submitter attention' and one for 'needs review attention'. Alexis -- Nova Engineer, HP Cloud. AKA lealexis, lxsli. __________________________________________________________________________ OpenStack Development Mailing List (not for usage questions) Unsubscribe: [email protected]?subject:unsubscribe http://lists.openstack.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/openstack-dev
