Hi Simon, zimoun <zimon.touto...@gmail.com> writes:
> Hi, > > Let’s have an Advent calendar effort! Everybody out there who is not > familiar with this tradition of an « Advent calendar » and to avoid any > ambiguity, I am appropriating myself the concept*: all of us try to > close one or more bug per day from 1rst to 31th December, then 2021 will > start on new balls as in tennis match. :-) > > In priority let pick bugs older than #30000 (~Jan. 2018). > > <http://issues.guix.gnu.org/forgotten> > > From Debbugs, I count 151 bugs or forgotten patches, almost 3 years! > Time to close them or investigate more. > > > If you do not know how to proceed: > > 1. pick an old bug and read the thread > 2. if the last message is ending with an unanswered question, then mark > it as moreinfo: send an email to cont...@debbugs.gnu.org using the > bug number (e.g., 23456) with: > > tags 23456 moreinfo > thanks > > Please give a look at: > <https://debbugs.gnu.org/server-control.html> > > 3. if you do not know what to do, then reply by asking if the bug is > still relevant for the author. Please provide one line to remember > the topic and the link which points to the bug: > > <http://issues.guix.gnu.org/issue/23456> > > 4. if it is a patch, then check if it is not superseded by something > already merged, else try to apply it and report success, rebase or > failure. > > Last, good candidates are bugs with only one or two messages. > > > I hereby offer some ’(define drink)’ for the one who will close as many > issues as possible in those 31 days. Well, with the hope to meet those > bug fighters once real time meeting will be possible again, otherwise > you will win my gratitude. :-) > > For now, Tobias and Maxim have good score but hey we are only the 1th > day. ;-) Eh, 2020 is behind us and I don't think I managed to close much bugs in last December; it's a priority I'll try to keep up with in 2021. Let's bring the number of issues down to something we can fit in our head more easily! Thanks for the initiative :-). Maxim