Michal Hlavinka wrote: > I like this idea, but I'm pretty sure this won't happen. I don't like the > bureaucracy you can see all around you. Fixing problems caused by > individual failure (or individual's failure) with new policy/law does not > make happy contributors/people. This is the exact behavior of Civil > Aviation Authority in my country - after 50 years of no problems there is > one a***ole that kills himself because of ignoring physics and > self-preservation, as result all sane normal people have to do more > paperwork and are more restricted. The only result is pilots are more and > more fed up every year. And know what, there are still people willingly > breaking the rules so it does not solve anything. +1, so true (and sad). :-( (BTW, it's not just your country, they just get it dictated from the EU. It's the same all over Europe, and it's worse on the other side of the Atlantic.) > Another comment: When I started to work for Fedora, I tried to do my best. > You know, there are some comparisons of OSes and distributions. One of the > comparisons being "How many days OS was vulnerable (with known exploitable > security bug)". So when there was new CVE-XXXX-YYYY bug, I tried to fix it > as fast as possible, because I wanted to make Fedora The Best Distro. But > what happened after I fixed this bug? It took whole week before new build > was tagged. Should I work hard if there is no visible result? I was > disappointed. Now, packages are tagged quickly and reliably, great > improvement (thanks to everyone who helped with this). But again, after > things were better we have new policy that delays all bug fixes from being > delivered quickly and I'm disappointed again. Indeed, these new PITA policies are very demotivating! > This idea would make users less happy, at least from what I see. > I manage a few Fedora systems for my friends/relatives who have almost > no IT knowledge nor they can use English. They don't care about > open-source and other "freedoms". They use Linux just because it's free > and usable (they always compare it with m$ windoze they used before). In > real world, bugs happen, they don't care too much about bugs in sw, if > there is visible progress. If they found a bug, they complain to me and I > file it in bugzilla. Once the bug is fixed, I report these wonderful news > to them and they are really happy. But... remove the "bug fix delivered to > Fn-1" and they won't be happy, in fact they would think that Linux sucks. > Restriction to most critical bugs only is not enough. And no, updating all > machines every 6 months is too much disturbing (for them) and time > consuming (for me). Indeed. I think it's a big mistake to provide only second-class support for Fn-1. The assertion that that's what the people on Fn-1 want is just unfounded, based on a misunderstanding of why people use Fn-1. > this could help, but it's not always possible to add these test cases. One > example: imap server package - new bug that can corrupt mail folders in > some circumstances. Maintainer updates package and sets 'type=bugfix' in > bodhi, but not always it's possible to write down any test case. It's > still a bug fix and it's better to be delivered sooner than wait if anyone > out there get's his mail folders corrupted. Actual policy does not help > proactivity. Right, and the big point there should be that a bug which can corrupt mail folders should be fixed IMMEDIATELY, i.e. with a direct stable push! ANY testing requirement there is a failure. >> Other concrete ideas? > > let maintainer decide, punish (enforce any policy) only those maintainers > who breaks something, not all innocent group +1! Kevin Kofler -- devel mailing list devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx https://admin.fedoraproject.org/mailman/listinfo/devel