Hi,

we have so far no experience with accepting pull requests via GitHub from
non-committers. Is this already a proven process from the ASF point of view
with respect to IP and licensing?

Best,
 - Fabian


2012/11/16 Peter Ansell <[email protected]>

> On 16 November 2012 08:56, danja <[email protected]> wrote:
> > GitHub user danja opened a pull request:
> >
> >     https://github.com/apache/stanbol/pull/1
> >
> >     baby steps towards user management endpoint(s)
> >
> >     in progress, no breakage
> >
> >     small piece of additional functionality, calls of the form:
> >
> >     curl --user admin:admin -H "Accept:text/turtle"
> http://127.0.0.1:8080/user-management/user/anonymous
> >
> >     will return user's graph.
> >
> > You can merge this pull request into a Git repository by running:
> >
> >     $ git pull https://github.com/fusepool/stanbol trunk
> >
> > Alternatively you can review and apply these changes as the patch at:
> >
> >     https://github.com/apache/stanbol/pull/1.patch
>
> I have found in the past that the easiest way to pull changes from Git
> back into Subversion (as the Git repository is a read-only mirror of
> the Stanbol Apache Subversion directory), is to use the .diff ending
> on GitHub URLs, as the resulting file is compatible with "patch -p1"
>
>     https://github.com/apache/stanbol/pull/1.diff
>
> Cheers,
>
> Peter
>



-- 
Fabian
http://twitter.com/fctwitt

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