We don't currently have plans to automatically associate revisions in one
repository to revisions in a new repository type. This would require a
pretty serious amount of work to support, and may have more corner cases
that seem obvious (e.g., what if a user *doesn't* want the association
made? Should we add a new project setting? A user setting?)

Since this doesn't become a problem very often -- this is the first time
I've heard a user ask for it -- I'm going to say it probably won't make it
very high on our prioritization list, sorry.

- Jason


On Wed, Feb 27, 2013 at 12:05 PM, Giampaolo RodolĂ  <[email protected]>wrote:

> 2013/2/27 Jason Hall <[email protected]>:
> > Having editable issue comments adds a lot of complexity and potentially
> > harmful side effects. For example, a user could comment "+1 if you like
> ice
> > cream!" and receive supportive comments, then edit their comment to say
> "+1
> > if you like the 1981 Chicago Bulls", and now all the supportive comments
> are
> > saying something they didn't intend.
> >
> > The current behavior also ensures that changes to the issue are
> reflected in
> > the comment stream, to preserve the history of the issue
> >
> > Perhaps a better solution would be to simply add additional comments to
> the
> > issues stating that the revision it points to is now rYYY instead of the
> > original rXXX. That way it's clear that the change happened, and the
> issue
> > reflects both the old and new state.
> >
> > - Jason
>
> Thanks for your quick reply Jason.
> What you suggest would certainly help in case no action whatsoever is
> taken by Google, but it remains sub optimal as different "rXXX"
> occurrences can be submitted during the lifetime of an issue.
> This is a good example:
> https://code.google.com/p/psutil/issues/detail?id=18#c35
>
> The ideal solution would be to make those "rXXX" occurrences point to
> the newer Mercurial cset.
> Is Google planning to do something like that any time soon? Is it even
> being tracked?
> If not I guess I'll follow your suggestion but please note that the
> "SVN to Mercurial/GIT" procedure you're currently offering is
> suffering a gap which is pretty serious for people like me who have
> been relying on the "rXXX" notation for many years .
>

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