I spoke with Vladimir briefly on IRC and he recommends that we just
move to GitHub Issues, reason being it works better with the GitHub
workflow (as Alex Dean also mentioned in his email).

I am okay with this, as long as we take the effort to go through
bugzilla.ganglia.info and close out obsolete tickets and move all the
relevant open ones to GitHub Issues.  We can leave the old bugs in
Bugzilla for archival purposes and in read-only mode.

Another option which Vladimir suggest is just forget about the old
tickets in Bugzilla and start fresh in GitHub Issues.

I am leaning towards option 1 -- what do you guys think?

Thanks,

Bernard

On Sat, May 12, 2012 at 2:12 AM, Daniel Pocock <dan...@pocock.com.au> wrote:
>
>
> On 12/05/12 00:44, Bernard Li wrote:
>> Hi Daniel:
>>
>> On Fri, May 11, 2012 at 3:08 AM, Daniel Pocock <dan...@pocock.com.au> wrote:
>>
>>> If I host it, it would purely be on a voluntary basis, so I would be
>>> hoping for upstream and/or Debian to be providing convenient packages
>>> and security updates.  Although I am quite capable of installing it
>>> manually, time spent maintaining such an install of bugzilla would cut
>>> into time spent maintaining any other open source packages I contribute to
>>
>> Thanks to Ben Hartshorne, I was able to find this:
>>
>> http://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=638705
>>
>> So yeah, bugzilla is temporarily removed from Debian.  However, it's
>
> Yes, that was the same link I posted - it doesn't say temporary or
> permanent, it just says they need at least 2 people willing to support
> the package in some sense.  It also suggests that the way upstream
> distributes the tarball makes it necessary to do a lot of patching, that
> deters people from maintaining a package.
>
>> still available in EPEL:
>>
>> http://dl.fedoraproject.org/pub/epel/6/x86_64/
>>
>> Is this really an issue?
>
> Yes, definitely, because if something like that is publicly accessible,
> it needs security updates.  Debian and RHEL often put out security
> updates for supported packages within a matter of hours (much faster
> than the non-Linux platform vendor)
>
> The reason for using Debian is that I already have a VM running for
> reSIProcate, it could be shared for the Ganglia project, used to
> bootstrap releases, etc.  The physical server is under a commercial
> hosting contract in Telehouse, one of London's most well connected data
> centres:
> http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Telehouse_Europe#London

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