Steve Grubb wrote: > For the record, I agree with this sentiment. If there's a bug in my > packages, I want to fix it and not cause the reporter to have to get > upstream bz accounts or join upstream mail lists just because they > reported a problem. I will interact with the reporter until I see the > problem myself. And then I can fix it or show upstream the problem. Maybe you package only stuff you're intimately familiar with from top to bottom and you get only very few bug reports. But in KDE, we get dozens of bug reports and it's a huge codebase. While most of the bugs are probably such that I could fix any of them on its own, there's no way I can fix all of them by myself (and even considering all the KDE SIG folks, we still don't have enough time to fix everything ourselves), nor would my fix necessarily be good enough to be accepted upstream (sometimes a good fix needs significant code changes which only the upstream maintainer of the affected code base is really qualified to do, and that's usually not a Fedora developer). So I think you're getting a better deal by us insisting on having the bugs handled upstream. I guess other codebases where bugs are expected to be filed upstream (e.g. Evolution, which was also brought up in this thread) are similar. Kevin Kofler -- fedora-devel-list mailing list fedora-devel-list@xxxxxxxxxx https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-devel-list