OK. Thanks Robert.

So I'll try adding it directly to trunk with the right IT so that it can be
verified.

Cheers


2013/1/27 Robert Scholte <[email protected]>

>  Normally you can commit on the trunk.
> If you plan huge changes or you want to try something first, you could
> make a branch.
> There are enough developers following/reviewing the commits, so keep them
> small and use the maven coding format for easy reading.
> Depending on the commit a reference to jira and a unittest or integration
> test is a good practice.
>
> The description of the rules sounds interesting enough to me to be added
> to the extra-enforcer-rules.
> ------------------------------
> From: [email protected]
> Date: Sun, 27 Jan 2013 22:00:00 +0100
> To: [email protected]
> Subject: [mojo-dev] Adding a new rule in extra-enforcer-rules? Enforcing
> bytecode version
>
>
> Hi all,
>
> On my github account [1], I have an enforcer rule I'd like to contribute
> extra-enforcer-rules.
> And btw, that one too [2] could easily be transformed into an enforcer
> rule.
>
> The questions is: as I'm still a bit new, I'm not sure about the process.
> Should I create a branch, directly commit to trunk, do something elsewhere
> and validate it (code and usefulnes) before modifying trunk?
>
> Thanks
> [1] https://github.com/Batmat/dependency-java-version-enforcer-rule#readme
>  [2] https://github.com/Batmat/artifactchecker-maven-plugin
>
> --
> Baptiste <Batmat> MATHUS - http://batmat.net
> Save A Tree,
> Eat A Beaver!
>



-- 
Baptiste <Batmat> MATHUS - http://batmat.net
Sauvez un arbre,
Mangez un castor !

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