On Tue, 9 Mar 2010 14:20:20 +0100, Mathieu wrote: > I maintain some niche packages that almost no one uses/no one would > provide karma for. But if I'm asked for a bugfix, and I do it, I want > the people requesting it to tell me that it indeed fixes the issue and > doesn't break anything else. Hard to comment on as the scenario is too vague. The bugfix may be trivial. The testing may be difficult. The added responsibility requirements ("doesn't break anything else") are scary. The level of participation the package maintainer asks for may be considered too much by the user. The user may have moved on already. Do you want to wait for the next user to find the same flaw? > Why would I bother if they don't care? Because other users judge about "your" broken product without contacting you. That may be ordinary users, who build and spread an opinion about Fedora's quality. Or more advanced users, who would build from source tarball themselves and tell their friends and contacts that it works while Fedora is broken. Or article writers, who review the distribution and may try "some niche packages", too. The bug report from _one_ user may be the most you get. Be thankful that somebody has taken the time to contact you. Once you've been informed about the problem, the user expects you to take appropriate action. Or else he would not remain a user, but would join and become a co-maintainer or take over the package. You are the one to offer something (on top of what upstream offers). Hence users believe that you have bigger interest than themselves in fixing things. It may be false expectations from users towards package maintainers, but it's reality. -- devel mailing list devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx https://admin.fedoraproject.org/mailman/listinfo/devel