On Mon, Feb 7, 2011 at 11:15 AM, Jonathan Robie
<jonathan.ro...@redhat.com>wrote:

> I'm also a repeat offender. I'll create the missing JIRAs and do better
> going forward.
>
> Question: I have some commits that I think are quite minor, fixing a
> README, whitespace, etc. I assume I don't need a JIRA for that kind of
> thing?
>

IMO I don't think you need a JIRA for trivial things like that.
However when you commit code it's best to have a JIRA.
95% of the commits done in actual code are either bug fixes or new features
or things that sort of sit in btw and I thing we need a JIRA for those.
The other 5% are probably fixing typos, documentation, cleaning up etc.. can
probably go in without a JIRA.

If you are fixing a bug, then even if it's just a one line commit, it's
really important to create a JIRA.
Also updating those JIRA's with release info is very important as well.
If not we really don't know what we fixed in each release.



>
> Jonathan
>
>
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>


-- 
Regards,

Rajith Attapattu
Red Hat
http://rajith.2rlabs.com/

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