Michael writes: > If the bug is with a program, the patch should go to the program's > developer. If they are applying the patch to 3rd party programs, then > it's basically a fork, a new version of an existing program.
When I receive a bug report on one of my packages with a patch that I think should be applied I forward it upstream but I also apply it to the next Debian version. It can take quite a while for upstream to incorporate such patches. > If they are relaying the patch back to the developer, then you don't need > Gentoo to do it, since you should be doing it yourself. You should file your bug report with your distribution and let them forward it. They will know whether the bug is truly in the upstream release or in something they have added and will be able to provide more information and testing and consolidate multiple reports of the same bug. > And if a patch is actually useful to a program, it should be folded into > the actual program itself. Yes, but let the distribution forward it. -- John Hasler [EMAIL PROTECTED] Dancing Horse Hill Elmwood, WI USA _______________________________________________ gnu-misc-discuss mailing list gnu-misc-discuss@gnu.org http://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/gnu-misc-discuss