Robert Haas wrote:
On Wed, Jan 6, 2010 at 4:10 PM, Stefan Kaltenbrunner
<ste...@kaltenbrunner.cc> wrote:
Robert Haas wrote:
On Wed, Jan 6, 2010 at 4:00 PM, Alvaro Herrera
<alvhe...@commandprompt.com> wrote:
Robert Haas escribió:
Over the past few months, I've been attempting to keep tracks of which
postings on pgsql-bugs have not gotten a response and to respond to
those where I have a clue what the issue might be.
So you installed the bugzilla module on yourself?  Neat.  Keep at it!
Actually it's Brucezilla.
hmm maybe I should resurrect the bugzilla testbed again :)

If we're going to use a bug-tracker, Bugzilla wouldn't be my first
choice, I don't think.  Honestly what I'd like better than a
full-fledged trackers is just a webapp that lists all the unreplied-to
emails in the pgsql-bugs archives.  That wouldn't of course tell you
if a bug got a reply that didn't actually resolve the issue, but that
doesn't seem to be very common anyway.  Most times if nobody responds
it's because either (1) it's not really a bug (user question, feature
request, etc.) or (2) the person who is qualified to respond doesn't
actually read pgsql-bugs.

*sigh* - that was mostly ment as a joke and not a really serious comment. However the idea I actually had with BZ back in the days was not to use it as a full fledged tracker(in the sense of exposing it to users or developers) Instead I would just use it as the background engine that does nothing more than being subscribed to -bugs, tracks the stuff there and provides an summary export about (not)replied to reports. If somebody later on wants to annotate the emails/reports there (as in solved,open,moved to todo,not a pg core question,whatever) fine - if not fine as well :)


Stefan

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