On Thursday 09 June 2011, Igor Galić wrote:
- Original Message -
On June 8, 2011 20:11 , Igor =?utf-8?Q?Gali=C4=87?=
i.ga...@brainsware.org wrote:
One of the many good suggestions they propose is to have a
Patch Manager - someone who makes sure that patches
submitted via
On Thursday 09 June 2011, Igor Galić wrote:
I've watched this talk three or four times by now, and every time
motivates me to look into our bug tracker. The overwhelming number
of (currently) 1133 open issues, however soon dampens my
enthusiasm.
http://s.apache.org/a2open
On June 8, 2011 20:11 , Igor =?utf-8?Q?Gali=C4=87?=
i.ga...@brainsware.org wrote:
One of the many good suggestions they propose is to have a
Patch Manager - someone who makes sure that patches
submitted via Bugzilla or directly to the list don't get lost
in the noise and that people get some
- Original Message -
On June 8, 2011 20:11 , Igor =?utf-8?Q?Gali=C4=87?=
i.ga...@brainsware.org wrote:
One of the many good suggestions they propose is to have a
Patch Manager - someone who makes sure that patches
submitted via Bugzilla or directly to the list don't get lost
in
Hi,
from time to time I prepare small patches to improve apache code source
quality.
These patches can be small speed up, removal of duplicated code, clean-up,
formatting... But no functionnal change as I'm not an apache guru yet.
This is more or less like what is done by the kernel janitors for
- Original Message -
Hi,
from time to time I prepare small patches to improve apache code
source
quality.
These patches can be small speed up, removal of duplicated code,
clean-up,
formatting... But no functionnal change as I'm not an apache guru
yet.
This is more or less like
Christophe's mail reminds me a bit of Brian Fitzpatrick and
Ben Collins-Sussman's talk Open Source Projects and Poisonous People
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-F-3E8pyjFo
One of the many good suggestions they propose is to have a
Patch Manager - someone who makes sure that patches
submitted via