On 01/30/2015 11:43 AM, David Shea wrote:
On 01/30/2015 11:19 AM, Brian C. Lane wrote:
On Fri, Jan 30, 2015 at 07:58:22AM -0500, David Shea wrote:
Another possibility is to use the web-service hook mechanism to send
a HTTP
request somewhere any time a pull request is created or commented
on, and we
could generate emails from that. The downsides are obvious: we would
have to
1) host it, and 2) write it. Though maybe #2 isn't entirely true,
since I
have a hard time believing that we're the first ones to do something
like
this. Does anyone know of a github thing, web service or otherwise, to
generate pull request emails?
And a 3rd, similar, possibility is to run something from cron that
queries the various things we're interested in using the github API and
does the posting to the list itself.
I'm starting to think that maybe integrating with the list is more
trouble than it's worth. We're already going to be getting the pull
request emails sent to us since we're owners/members of the team. Anyone
else interested can watch the repos using github to get the same
messages.
Well, one fun thing that clumens found with pykickstart patches is
that if you have a pull request with a bunch of line comments on it,
and then the contributor does a push --force to update the patch, all
those line comments are lost. So it would be nice to have a more
permanent record of these things.
Fedora has a thing to sign up repos to push stuff to fedmsg, so that
might be a possibility, too.
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