Re: [HACKERS] What do you want me to do?

2003-12-26 Thread Dave Page
It's rumoured that David Fetter once said:

 I guess that's OK, but it shows up like a beacon to all kinds of
 hostile gear.  Passive systems are usually a better bet.

Are there many hostile forces in your hallway?

:-)

/D



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Re: [HACKERS] What do you want me to do?

2003-12-26 Thread David Fetter
On Fri, Dec 26, 2003 at 10:48:20AM -, Dave Page wrote:
 It's rumoured that David Fetter once said:
 
  I guess that's OK, but it shows up like a beacon to all kinds of
  hostile gear.  Passive systems are usually a better bet.
 
 Are there many hostile forces in your hallway?

Most days not, but I've heard PA can be pretty rough ;)

Cheers,
'nother D
-- 
David Fetter [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://fetter.org/
phone: +1 510 893 6100cell: +1 415 235 3778

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Re: [HACKERS] What do you want me to do?

2003-12-25 Thread David Fetter
In article [EMAIL PROTECTED] you wrote:
 [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Bruce Momjian) writes:
 The worst was my upstairs hallway that had no light fixtures, so
 late at night if no other lights were on in the house, you had to
 walk down the hallway with your hands out in front of you so you
 didn't bump into anything.  We had a nightlight in the hallway, but
 that didn't help much.

 Here's the solution:
  http://www.nightvis.com/site/hm/pvs5/default.asp
 
  Excalibur's Dual Tube Goggle Systems are precision-manufactured
  night vision devices which provide near-daylight operational
  capabilities at night. A built-in Infrared Light Emitting Diode (IR
  LED) provides on-call covert illumination for close-up work in
  totally dark areas. In addition, the dual tube configuration
  improves reliability and aids in the physical coordination of
  tasks, such as traversing uneven terrain, or performing complicated
  tasks by hand.

I guess that's OK, but it shows up like a beacon to all kinds of
hostile gear.  Passive systems are usually a better bet.

Cheers,
D
-- 
David Fetter [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://fetter.org/
phone: +1 510 893 6100cell: +1 415 235 3778

Information causes change, and if it doesn't, it's not information.
You're sitting in a seat: that's not information.  The person next to
you has a communicable disease: now that's information.
 James Burke

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Re: [HACKERS] What do you want me to do?

2003-11-10 Thread Robert Treat
On Fri, 2003-11-07 at 18:37, Andrew Dunstan wrote:
 Robert Treat wrote:
 On Fri, 2003-11-07 at 15:28, Andrew Dunstan wrote:
 Marc G. Fournier wrote:
 On Fri, 7 Nov 2003, Robert Treat wrote:
 I know most people have talked about using bugzilla, but is anyone
 familiar with GNATS?  I'm currently rereading Open Sources and there's a
 paragraph or two mentioning it's use and the fact that it can be
 interfaced with completely by email.

 FreeBSD uses it almost exclusively and it supports email interaction with
 the database, but I don't think there are very many good GUI front ends
 for it (or, at least, not that I've seen) ...
 
 No.
 
 personal axe to grind?  
 
 
 er, no. I was only agreeing with Marc about GUI interfaces. What axe to 
 grind do you imagine I could have?

sorry, i just wondered because you gave a one word response dismissing
the idea and moved on...

 
 I've never used it, but it's been around a long
 time, allows for interaction completely through email (which is how we
 do things now), has a web front end for anyone who wants to use it to
 use, and as i understand it has a tcl based desktop app for folks to use
 as well.  seems it's being dismissed prematurely imho.
 
 Every person wishing to submit a bug will have to have send-pr installed 
 or else we'll get lots of reports not broken up into fields. That 
 doesn't sound like a recipe for success to me.
 

not really... we can still have a web interface to it, so anyone
submitting a bug could use the web interface. now maybe for regular
folks working on bugs this would be an issue.. don't know, i'm not
familiar send-pr...

 
 A few other thoughts:
 . the Samba team have apparently abandoned their own tool and moved to 
 bugzilla
 . if we used bugzilla this might give some impetus to the bugzilla 
 team's efforts to provide pg as a backend (maybe we could help with that)
 . it would seem slightly strange to me for an RDBMS project to use a bug 
 tracking system that was not RDBMS-backed
 
 
 
 we serve far more static pages on the website than we do database driven
 ones... 
 
 *nod* but there has been talk of moving to bricolage, hasn't there?


if only because it outputs static content...
 
 the software we distribute is housed on fileservers and sent via
 ftp, we dont expect people to store and retrieve it from a database...
 
 
 you're reaching now ...
 
 our mailing lists software actually uses another db product in fact...
 let's just get the right tool for the job... 
  
 
 Yes. I agree. Bugs (including enhancements) strike me as a classic case 
 of data that belongs in a database.
 

i think it's something that needs to be searchable, whether that
requires the worlds most powerful open source object relational
database management system is something else entirely ;-)

   
 
 . developers are far more likely to be familiar with bugzilla
 
 developers are far more likely to be familiar with windows and mysql as
 well...
 
 
 c'mon ...
 
your strawman meets my strawman... 

 
 . are there any active developers without web access? If not, why is 
 pure email interaction important?
 
 
 for the same reason mailing lists work better than message boards...
 it's just easier. i'm much more likely to read an email list the scroll
 through web forms, and if i am going to respond to a bug report, i'm
 much mroe likely to if i can hit reply and start typing than if i have
 to fire up a browser to do it.
 
 
 Tom explicitly said he *didn't* want a system where email poured 
 straight into the bugtrack db.
 

Which I find odd since thats essentially the system we have now... 

 Yes, it is a different way of doing things, and it takes getting used to.
 
 
 Bugzilla is far from perfect. But it's getting better.
 
 
 don't get me wrong, i like bugzilla and all, but theres no need to put
 blinders on...
 
 
 I don't. But I do think the current processes can stand improvement.
 
right... i think gnats is one way of doing that. bugzilla is decent, it
just doesn't seems as advanced as gnats which is why i brought it up...
we don't need to beat it to death though, I think tom has fixed more
bugs than me recently so if he is interested in bugzilla i'm all for
giving it a twirl...

Robert Treat
-- 
Build A Brighter Lamp :: Linux Apache {middleware} PostgreSQL


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Re: [HACKERS] What do you want me to do?

2003-11-08 Thread Peter Eisentraut
Tom Lane writes:

 What we could use instead is for someone knowledgeable to commit to
 transferring *valid* emailed bug reports into the tracking system.
 Bruce could do that if he wants, but there are surely dozens of other
 people who would be qualified to handle this task.

I don't think we need decicated bug transferrers.  Typically, when someone
reports a problem by email, the first step is that some developer or other
expert responds (unless the reporter gets blown away by fellow users as
clueless :-)).  So the natural extension of this process would be that the
person doing the analysis records the problem.  The only way we can get
more people involved in doing the recording is if more people can do the
analyzing.  And that step is independent of the presence of a bug-tracking
system.

In other words, I don't want to have a group of people cleaning up after
a different group of people along the lines of the current Is this a TODO
item?.  That way, we'd just have a more complex technology but no process
improvement.

I don't even think that the flood of bug reports is that bad.  Over the
last 60 days I counted at most 14 genuine bug reports on pgsql-bugs,
including those that are wishlist items and those that are old project
lore and would have been duplicates of existing recorded bugs.  So even if
you count in bugs coming in through other channels, this should be
manageable.

-- 
Peter Eisentraut   [EMAIL PROTECTED]


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Re: [HACKERS] What do you want me to do?

2003-11-08 Thread Dave Cramer
I think we should use the best tool available, he is more than willing
to allow open source projects to use it for free.

Dave
On Fri, 2003-11-07 at 23:19, Tom Lane wrote:
 Andrew Dunstan [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
  Dave Cramer wrote:
  Jira is a fantastic bug tracking project management system and is
  available free of charge for open source projects.
 
  Wow, that looks very cool indeed! And they are Aussies to boot! :-)
 
 But they don't seem to be on the free-open-source wavelength.
 PostgreSQL is free, period.  So is all the software we depend upon.
 I don't think we are interested in depending upon code that has this
 sort of verbiage about how you are allowed to use it and what it will
 cost:
 http://www.atlassian.com/software/jira/pricing.jsp
 
   regards, tom lane
 
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Re: [HACKERS] What do you want me to do?

2003-11-08 Thread Tom Lane
Peter Eisentraut [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
 I don't think we need decicated bug transferrers.  Typically, when someone
 reports a problem by email, the first step is that some developer or other
 expert responds (unless the reporter gets blown away by fellow users as
 clueless :-)).  So the natural extension of this process would be that the
 person doing the analysis records the problem.

Yeah, that sounds like it would work.

I still think it would be a good idea to have one or two people actively
in charge of the overall health of the bug repository --- cross-linking
duplicate bugs, making sure fixed bugs get closed out, in general
correcting misinformation when they find it.  This wouldn't be a large
time commitment AFAICS, but without somebody applying pressure in the
right direction I think that the general quality of information in
the database would inevitably slide downhill.

regards, tom lane

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Re: [HACKERS] What do you want me to do?

2003-11-08 Thread Abhijit Menon-Sen
 http://www.atlassian.com/software/jira/pricing.jsp

I have no particular opinion on whether to use a free or non-free system
to track bugs, but I'd like to recommend RT as being a very capable and
useful program. It has been used to track Perl 5 and CPAN bugs for some
time now, and it happens to be free (and it can use PostgreSQL :).

http://www.bestpractical.com/rt/

-- ams

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Re: [HACKERS] What do you want me to do?

2003-11-08 Thread Rod Taylor
 I still think it would be a good idea to have one or two people actively
 in charge of the overall health of the bug repository --- cross-linking
 duplicate bugs, making sure fixed bugs get closed out, in general
 correcting misinformation when they find it.  This wouldn't be a large

I think there are a number of people out there who would be willing to
do this, myself included.

-- 
Rod Taylor pg [at] rbt [dot] ca

Build A Brighter Lamp :: Linux Apache {middleware} PostgreSQL


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Re: [HACKERS] What do you want me to do?

2003-11-08 Thread ow

  http://www.atlassian.com/software/jira/pricing.jsp

Another option is free open source Scarab, http://scarab.tigris.org Actually,
I'd prefer it.














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Protect your identity with Yahoo! Mail AddressGuard
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Re: [HACKERS] What do you want me to do?

2003-11-08 Thread Andrew Dunstan


Tom Lane wrote:

Peter Eisentraut [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
 

I don't think we need decicated bug transferrers.  Typically, when someone
reports a problem by email, the first step is that some developer or other
expert responds (unless the reporter gets blown away by fellow users as
clueless :-)).  So the natural extension of this process would be that the
person doing the analysis records the problem.
   

Yeah, that sounds like it would work.

I still think it would be a good idea to have one or two people actively
in charge of the overall health of the bug repository --- cross-linking
duplicate bugs, making sure fixed bugs get closed out, in general
correcting misinformation when they find it.  This wouldn't be a large
time commitment AFAICS, but without somebody applying pressure in the
right direction I think that the general quality of information in
the database would inevitably slide downhill.
 

You have described a good part of my professional life in the last 3 
years ;-) I had a meeting every morning with product/project management 
to review/triage bugs and in turn I would spend hours asking my staff 
What is happening with bug xyz?. I lived off the bug system (bugzilla 
and/or ClearQuest). Getting developers used to it is still a hassle - I 
once had to send out an email that said in effect if you aren't working 
on a defect assigned to you then you aren't doing your job.

In a volunteer project things work somewhat differently, of course, but 
the housekeeping functions are still essential.

cheers

andrew

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Re: [HACKERS] What do you want me to do?

2003-11-07 Thread Alvaro Herrera
On Fri, Nov 07, 2003 at 12:16:23PM -0500, Bruce Momjian wrote:
 Here are the major things I do for the PostgreSQL project.  Are there
 some items I should be doing more/less of?
 
   o  Patches
   o  TODO/FAQ
   o  Email discussion, coordination
   o  Win32
   o  Talks
   o  Books/articles
   o  Web site cleanup
   o  Source code cleanup
   o  Features/fixes

I'd say stay away from web site and source code clean up; there are
already people working on those, or are very good areas for new
developers to start knowing the code.  Keeping the TODO up to date
probably is a very important tool for coordinating the janitorial
work.  I remember thinking, when somebody proposed using the
bugtracking system, that other projects need it (bugtracking) because
they don't have a Bruce Momjian to do it for them.

Applying patches, mantaining the TODO and FAQ and coordinating things
are, AFAICS, part of your historical duties, so while they could
certainly be handled by someone else, it may be best for you to keep on
it.

You should really keep on your talks and courses.  Given that teaching
is part of your professional career, you are probably the best qualified
person to do it.

I don't know much about articles, but if you can put some work on
updating your book it would be really cool.

I don't have an opinion on the Win32 issue.

-- 
Alvaro Herrera (alvherre[a]dcc.uchile.cl)
No renuncies a nada. No te aferres a nada.

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Re: [HACKERS] What do you want me to do?

2003-11-07 Thread Marc G. Fournier


On Fri, 7 Nov 2003, Bruce Momjian wrote:

 Here are the major things I do for the PostgreSQL project.  Are there
 some items I should be doing more/less of?

   o  Patches
   o  TODO/FAQ
   o  Email discussion, coordination
   o  Win32
   o  Talks
   o  Books/articles
   o  Web site cleanup
   o  Source code cleanup
   o  Features/fixes
o  Spend time with the Family? :)

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Re: [HACKERS] What do you want me to do?

2003-11-07 Thread Andrew Dunstan
Alvaro Herrera wrote:

I don't have an opinion on the Win32 issue.
 

I do :-)

I think the most important thing for Win32 is for you to set the 
direction somewhat (i.e. in more detail than is on your win32 page) and 
then jump on Joshua's offer of a dedicated developer (possibly two) to 
work on it for 320 hours.

cheers

andrew



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Re: [HACKERS] What do you want me to do?

2003-11-07 Thread Bruce Momjian
Marc G. Fournier wrote:
 
 
 On Fri, 7 Nov 2003, Bruce Momjian wrote:
 
  Here are the major things I do for the PostgreSQL project.  Are there
  some items I should be doing more/less of?
 
  o  Patches
  o  TODO/FAQ
  o  Email discussion, coordination
  o  Win32
  o  Talks
  o  Books/articles
  o  Web site cleanup
  o  Source code cleanup
  o  Features/fixes
 o  Spend time with the Family? :)

Actually, work on the house was a big item the past few weeks.  I moved
into a new house a year ago but hadn't made much progress on my house
todo list in the previous six months, so I worked on that for a while.

The worst was my upstairs hallway that had no light fixtures, so late at
night if no other lights were on in the house, you had to walk down the
hallway with your hands out in front of you so you didn't bump into
anything.  We had a nightlight in the hallway, but that didn't help
much.

-- 
  Bruce Momjian|  http://candle.pha.pa.us
  [EMAIL PROTECTED]   |  (610) 359-1001
  +  If your life is a hard drive, |  13 Roberts Road
  +  Christ can be your backup.|  Newtown Square, Pennsylvania 19073

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Re: [HACKERS] What do you want me to do?

2003-11-07 Thread Peter Eisentraut
Bruce Momjian writes:

   o  TODO/FAQ

The FAQ might as well be maintained just like the rest of the
documentation, i.e., by the development group as a whole.

The TODO list could be replaced by a kind of bug-tracking system with
developer write access only, so developers could keep their private notes
lists in public, add comments on why things are difficult, if the
perspective changes, etc.  I have the feeling that key developers for the
most part ignore the TODO list and keep their private set of notes.

-- 
Peter Eisentraut   [EMAIL PROTECTED]


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Re: [HACKERS] What do you want me to do?

2003-11-07 Thread Marc G. Fournier


On Fri, 7 Nov 2003, Bruce Momjian wrote:

 Marc G. Fournier wrote:
 
 
  On Fri, 7 Nov 2003, Bruce Momjian wrote:
 
   Here are the major things I do for the PostgreSQL project.  Are there
   some items I should be doing more/less of?
  
 o  Patches
 o  TODO/FAQ
 o  Email discussion, coordination
 o  Win32
 o  Talks
 o  Books/articles
 o  Web site cleanup
 o  Source code cleanup
 o  Features/fixes
  o  Spend time with the Family? :)

 Actually, work on the house was a big item the past few weeks.  I moved
 into a new house a year ago but hadn't made much progress on my house
 todo list in the previous six months, so I worked on that for a while.

 The worst was my upstairs hallway that had no light fixtures, so late at
 night if no other lights were on in the house, you had to walk down the
 hallway with your hands out in front of you so you didn't bump into
 anything.  We had a nightlight in the hallway, but that didn't help
 much.

Nightgoogles? :)


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Re: [HACKERS] What do you want me to do?

2003-11-07 Thread Bruce Momjian
Peter Eisentraut wrote:
 Bruce Momjian writes:
 
  o  TODO/FAQ
 
 The FAQ might as well be maintained just like the rest of the
 documentation, i.e., by the development group as a whole.

I encourage others to commit to the FAQ.html file in CVS.  The only
unique thing I do is to generate the flat file in /docs, and that can be
done at release time.

 The TODO list could be replaced by a kind of bug-tracking system with
 developer write access only, so developers could keep their private notes
 lists in public, add comments on why things are difficult, if the
 perspective changes, etc.  I have the feeling that key developers for the
 most part ignore the TODO list and keep their private set of notes.

The only unique thing I do there is to generate an HTML and throw it on
the web site;  again, others are encouraged to update it.  I do like
having a file that is small enough to be readable in a short time, but
the right bug-tracking system could do that.

-- 
  Bruce Momjian|  http://candle.pha.pa.us
  [EMAIL PROTECTED]   |  (610) 359-1001
  +  If your life is a hard drive, |  13 Roberts Road
  +  Christ can be your backup.|  Newtown Square, Pennsylvania 19073

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Re: [HACKERS] What do you want me to do?

2003-11-07 Thread Robert Treat
On Fri, 2003-11-07 at 14:00, Bruce Momjian wrote:
 Peter Eisentraut wrote:
  Bruce Momjian writes:
  
 o  TODO/FAQ
  
  The FAQ might as well be maintained just like the rest of the
  documentation, i.e., by the development group as a whole.
 
 I encourage others to commit to the FAQ.html file in CVS.  The only
 unique thing I do is to generate the flat file in /docs, and that can be
 done at release time.
 
  The TODO list could be replaced by a kind of bug-tracking system with
  developer write access only, so developers could keep their private notes
  lists in public, add comments on why things are difficult, if the
  perspective changes, etc.  I have the feeling that key developers for the
  most part ignore the TODO list and keep their private set of notes.
 
 The only unique thing I do there is to generate an HTML and throw it on
 the web site;  again, others are encouraged to update it.  I do like
 having a file that is small enough to be readable in a short time, but
 the right bug-tracking system could do that.
 

I know most people have talked about using bugzilla, but is anyone
familiar with GNATS?  I'm currently rereading Open Sources and there's a
paragraph or two mentioning it's use and the fact that it can be
interfaced with completely by email. 

Robert Treat
-- 
Build A Brighter Lamp :: Linux Apache {middleware} PostgreSQL


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Re: [HACKERS] What do you want me to do?

2003-11-07 Thread Marc G. Fournier


On Fri, 7 Nov 2003, Robert Treat wrote:

 On Fri, 2003-11-07 at 14:00, Bruce Momjian wrote:
  Peter Eisentraut wrote:
   Bruce Momjian writes:
  
o  TODO/FAQ
  
   The FAQ might as well be maintained just like the rest of the
   documentation, i.e., by the development group as a whole.
 
  I encourage others to commit to the FAQ.html file in CVS.  The only
  unique thing I do is to generate the flat file in /docs, and that can be
  done at release time.
 
   The TODO list could be replaced by a kind of bug-tracking system with
   developer write access only, so developers could keep their private notes
   lists in public, add comments on why things are difficult, if the
   perspective changes, etc.  I have the feeling that key developers for the
   most part ignore the TODO list and keep their private set of notes.
 
  The only unique thing I do there is to generate an HTML and throw it on
  the web site;  again, others are encouraged to update it.  I do like
  having a file that is small enough to be readable in a short time, but
  the right bug-tracking system could do that.
 

 I know most people have talked about using bugzilla, but is anyone
 familiar with GNATS?  I'm currently rereading Open Sources and there's a
 paragraph or two mentioning it's use and the fact that it can be
 interfaced with completely by email.

FreeBSD uses it almost exclusively and it supports email interaction with
the database, but I don't think there are very many good GUI front ends
for it (or, at least, not that I've seen) ...

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Re: [HACKERS] What do you want me to do?

2003-11-07 Thread Christopher Browne
[EMAIL PROTECTED] (Bruce Momjian) writes:
 The worst was my upstairs hallway that had no light fixtures, so late at
 night if no other lights were on in the house, you had to walk down the
 hallway with your hands out in front of you so you didn't bump into
 anything.  We had a nightlight in the hallway, but that didn't help
 much.

Here's the solution:
  http://www.nightvis.com/site/hm/pvs5/default.asp

  Excalibur's Dual Tube Goggle Systems are precision-manufactured
  night vision devices which provide near-daylight operational
  capabilities at night. A built-in Infrared Light Emitting Diode (IR
  LED) provides on-call covert illumination for close-up work in
  totally dark areas. In addition, the dual tube configuration
  improves reliability and aids in the physical coordination of tasks,
  such as traversing uneven terrain, or performing complicated tasks
  by hand.
-- 
output = reverse(ofni.smrytrebil @ enworbbc)
http://dev6.int.libertyrms.com/
Christopher Browne
(416) 646 3304 x124 (land)

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Re: [HACKERS] What do you want me to do?

2003-11-07 Thread Andrew Dunstan
Marc G. Fournier wrote:

On Fri, 7 Nov 2003, Robert Treat wrote:

 

I know most people have talked about using bugzilla, but is anyone
familiar with GNATS?  I'm currently rereading Open Sources and there's a
paragraph or two mentioning it's use and the fact that it can be
interfaced with completely by email.
   

FreeBSD uses it almost exclusively and it supports email interaction with
the database, but I don't think there are very many good GUI front ends
for it (or, at least, not that I've seen) ...
 

No.

A few other thoughts:
. the Samba team have apparently abandoned their own tool and moved to 
bugzilla
. if we used bugzilla this might give some impetus to the bugzilla 
team's efforts to provide pg as a backend (maybe we could help with that)
. it would seem slightly strange to me for an RDBMS project to use a bug 
tracking system that was not RDBMS-backed
. developers are far more likely to be familiar with bugzilla
. are there any active developers without web access? If not, why is 
pure email interaction important?

Bugzilla is far from perfect. But it's getting better.

cheers

andrew

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Re: [HACKERS] What do you want me to do?

2003-11-07 Thread Andrew Dunstan
Christopher Browne wrote:

[EMAIL PROTECTED] (Bruce Momjian) writes:
 

The worst was my upstairs hallway that had no light fixtures, so late at
night if no other lights were on in the house, you had to walk down the
hallway with your hands out in front of you so you didn't bump into
anything.  We had a nightlight in the hallway, but that didn't help
much.
   

Here's the solution:
 http://www.nightvis.com/site/hm/pvs5/default.asp
 Excalibur's Dual Tube Goggle Systems are precision-manufactured
 night vision devices which provide near-daylight operational
 capabilities at night. A built-in Infrared Light Emitting Diode (IR
 LED) provides on-call covert illumination for close-up work in
 totally dark areas. In addition, the dual tube configuration
 improves reliability and aids in the physical coordination of tasks,
 such as traversing uneven terrain, or performing complicated tasks
 by hand.
 

Or the low-tech solution: don't go upstairs late at night ...

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Re: [HACKERS] What do you want me to do?

2003-11-07 Thread Bruce Momjian
Christopher Browne wrote:
 [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Bruce Momjian) writes:
  The worst was my upstairs hallway that had no light fixtures, so late at
  night if no other lights were on in the house, you had to walk down the
  hallway with your hands out in front of you so you didn't bump into
  anything.  We had a nightlight in the hallway, but that didn't help
  much.
 
 Here's the solution:
   http://www.nightvis.com/site/hm/pvs5/default.asp
 
   Excalibur's Dual Tube Goggle Systems are precision-manufactured
   night vision devices which provide near-daylight operational
   capabilities at night. A built-in Infrared Light Emitting Diode (IR
   LED) provides on-call covert illumination for close-up work in
   totally dark areas. In addition, the dual tube configuration
   improves reliability and aids in the physical coordination of tasks,
   such as traversing uneven terrain, or performing complicated tasks
   by hand.

Now that I think of it, I think my wife removed the night light because
she didn't like the light coming into our bedroom, and that's were
things really got dark.

-- 
  Bruce Momjian|  http://candle.pha.pa.us
  [EMAIL PROTECTED]   |  (610) 359-1001
  +  If your life is a hard drive, |  13 Roberts Road
  +  Christ can be your backup.|  Newtown Square, Pennsylvania 19073

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Re: [HACKERS] What do you want me to do?

2003-11-07 Thread Tom Lane
Andrew Dunstan [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
 Bugzilla is far from perfect. But it's getting better.

FWIW, I would like to try a bugzilla-based tracking system for Postgres.
Our last attempt at a tracking system failed miserably, but I think that
was (a) because the software we tried was really unpolished, and (b)
because we let anybody and his pet chihuahua enter bug reports, so the
signal-to-noise ratio went to zero in no time.  As long as we can
restrict data entry to people who know what they're doing (not
necessarily developers, but people who know PG well enough to tell bug
from user error), I think it could work, and would beat the heck out of
the way we do things now.


 . if we used bugzilla this might give some impetus to the bugzilla 
 team's efforts to provide pg as a backend (maybe we could help with that)

Red Hat has been using a PG-based version of bugzilla for some time.
I'm not sure what the holdup is in getting that work merged back
upstream, but I'd sure like to see it happen.  Anyway we could start
with using their version, rather than suffer the ignominy of using That
Other Database to track our own bug reports ;-)


 . are there any active developers without web access? If not, why is 
 pure email interaction important?

Bugzilla already does email output (ie, notify you of changes to bug
entries you're interested in) well enough.  We thought during the last
go-round that it was important to have email input so we could allow
mail to pgsql-bugs to go directly into the tracking system, but in
hindsight that was a really bad idea.  What we could use instead is for
someone knowledgeable to commit to transferring *valid* emailed bug
reports into the tracking system.  Bruce could do that if he wants, but
there are surely dozens of other people who would be qualified to handle
this task.

Actually, whatever software we pick to run the tracking system,
my guess is that the experiment will not stand or fall on the software.
What we need for success is one or two people who will take
responsibility for housekeeping: putting in valid reports, spotting
duplicate reports and doing the right cleanup, etc.  Do we have any
volunteers for that sort of thing?

regards, tom lane

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Re: [HACKERS] What do you want me to do?

2003-11-07 Thread Bruce Momjian
Andrew Dunstan wrote:
 Alvaro Herrera wrote:
 
 I don't have an opinion on the Win32 issue.
   
 
 I do :-)
 
 I think the most important thing for Win32 is for you to set the 
 direction somewhat (i.e. in more detail than is on your win32 page) and 
 then jump on Joshua's offer of a dedicated developer (possibly two) to 
 work on it for 320 hours.

I am on it!  I will talk to Joshua's guys every day if I can.  I am going
over the emails now that need attention.

-- 
  Bruce Momjian|  http://candle.pha.pa.us
  [EMAIL PROTECTED]   |  (610) 359-1001
  +  If your life is a hard drive, |  13 Roberts Road
  +  Christ can be your backup.|  Newtown Square, Pennsylvania 19073

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Re: [HACKERS] What do you want me to do?

2003-11-07 Thread Alessio Bragadini
On Fri, 2003-11-07 at 23:07, Tom Lane wrote:

 FWIW, I would like to try a bugzilla-based tracking system for Postgres.

 Red Hat has been using a PG-based version of bugzilla for some time.
 I'm not sure what the holdup is in getting that work merged back
 upstream, but I'd sure like to see it happen.

Actually, the porting of Bugzilla to PostgreSQL has been under
development for some time. Or, to put it more precisely, it's an effort
to clean up the code from any MySQL-ism in order to run on different
databases.

Bug #98304 dedicated to PostgreSQL has been unfortunately opened for a
long time, you can see the discussion at
http://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=98304
and the target release is the upcoming 2.18 - but targets have been
delayed before. I haven't checked recently if anything works right now.

Red Hat's port is more of a hack applied to a specific version of
Bugzilla. See http://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=98304#c57

IMHO it would be a good idea to help the Bugzilla team to finish the
port in time for release 2.18 and join a very active tool.

-- 
Alessio Bragadini [EMAIL PROTECTED]
APL Financial Services (Overseas) Ltd


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Re: [HACKERS] What do you want me to do?

2003-11-07 Thread Greg Stark

 . if we used bugzilla this might give some impetus to the bugzilla team's
 efforts to provide pg as a backend (maybe we could help with that)

I would actually suggest trying RT. It's not primarily a bug tracking system
and there's a bit of an impedance mismatch between a trouble ticketing system
and a bug tracking system. But there would be a few advantages.

RT has a big non-open-source-developer user-base. There are a lot of big
businesses using it for enterprise-class trouble-ticketing. Currently it
supports Postgres for a backend but a lot of the queries perform terribly.

The combination means Postgres makes a lot of bad impressions. There are
continually threads on the RT mailing lists about how to migrate an RT
installation to MySQL because Postgres isn't scaling up enough and MySQL
performs better. And these people aren't wrong, it does for RT because the
queries were originally written for MySQL.

If postgres ran RT these queries would probably get cleaned up rapidly. And
with optimized queries Postgres would undoubtedly scale better than MySQL to
large installations.

 . are there any active developers without web access? If not, why is pure
 email interaction important?

Because web-only access to bug reports is a sure way to get them ignored.
You're depending on developers periodically checking some web page. I can
barely remember to check slashdot and news.google.com once a day, nevermind
the 50 bug pages for the various projects I'm subscribed to mailing lists for.

In any case both bugzilla and RT support mail notifications with the full
content of the changes, so that's pretty irrelevant. I think RT has more mail
integration because it's often used for trouble ticketing systems where e-mail
is the only published interface, but I'm not sure.

PS:

Another option is the Debian bug tracking system, which was rewritten recently
and is pretty neat. It's 100% mail driven with web pages to do various
searches and display bugs. 

-- 
greg


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Re: [HACKERS] What do you want me to do?

2003-11-07 Thread Andrew Sullivan
On Fri, Nov 07, 2003 at 04:07:46PM -0500, Tom Lane wrote:
 Actually, whatever software we pick to run the tracking system,
 my guess is that the experiment will not stand or fall on the software.
 What we need for success is one or two people who will take
 responsibility for housekeeping: putting in valid reports, spotting
 duplicate reports and doing the right cleanup, etc.  Do we have any
 volunteers for that sort of thing?

What kind of volunteers do you want?  Do you want first-level people
who will filter most of the reports for noise, c., before you get to
trusty developers, or do you want one or two people who really know
the code to take the reports and either file them in the bug tracking
system or in the round bin?

I've seen projects succeed both ways, and that's why I'm asking.

A

-- 

Andrew Sullivan 204-4141 Yonge Street
Afilias CanadaToronto, Ontario Canada
[EMAIL PROTECTED]  M2P 2A8
 +1 416 646 3304 x110


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Re: [HACKERS] What do you want me to do?

2003-11-07 Thread Robert Treat
On Fri, 2003-11-07 at 15:28, Andrew Dunstan wrote:
 Marc G. Fournier wrote:
 
 On Fri, 7 Nov 2003, Robert Treat wrote:
 
   
 
 I know most people have talked about using bugzilla, but is anyone
 familiar with GNATS?  I'm currently rereading Open Sources and there's a
 paragraph or two mentioning it's use and the fact that it can be
 interfaced with completely by email.
 
 
 
 FreeBSD uses it almost exclusively and it supports email interaction with
 the database, but I don't think there are very many good GUI front ends
 for it (or, at least, not that I've seen) ...
 
   
 
 
 No.
 

personal axe to grind?  I've never used it, but it's been around a long
time, allows for interaction completely through email (which is how we
do things now), has a web front end for anyone who wants to use it to
use, and as i understand it has a tcl based desktop app for folks to use
as well.  seems it's being dismissed prematurely imho.

 A few other thoughts:
 . the Samba team have apparently abandoned their own tool and moved to 
 bugzilla
 . if we used bugzilla this might give some impetus to the bugzilla 
 team's efforts to provide pg as a backend (maybe we could help with that)
 . it would seem slightly strange to me for an RDBMS project to use a bug 
 tracking system that was not RDBMS-backed

we serve far more static pages on the website than we do database driven
ones... the software we distribute is housed on fileservers and sent via
ftp, we dont expect people to store and retrieve it from a database...
our mailing lists software actually uses another db product in fact...
let's just get the right tool for the job... 

 . developers are far more likely to be familiar with bugzilla

developers are far more likely to be familiar with windows and mysql as
well...

 . are there any active developers without web access? If not, why is 
 pure email interaction important?

for the same reason mailing lists work better than message boards...
it's just easier. i'm much more likely to read an email list the scroll
through web forms, and if i am going to respond to a bug report, i'm
much mroe likely to if i can hit reply and start typing than if i have
to fire up a browser to do it.

 
 Bugzilla is far from perfect. But it's getting better.
 

don't get me wrong, i like bugzilla and all, but theres no need to put
blinders on...

Robert Treat
-- 
Build A Brighter Lamp :: Linux Apache {middleware} PostgreSQL


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Re: [HACKERS] What do you want me to do?

2003-11-07 Thread Dave Cramer
Jira is a fantastic bug tracking project management system and is
available free of charge for open source projects.

http://www.atlassian.com/software/jira/

Dave

On Fri, 2003-11-07 at 16:48, Andrew Sullivan wrote:
 On Fri, Nov 07, 2003 at 04:07:46PM -0500, Tom Lane wrote:
  Actually, whatever software we pick to run the tracking system,
  my guess is that the experiment will not stand or fall on the software.
  What we need for success is one or two people who will take
  responsibility for housekeeping: putting in valid reports, spotting
  duplicate reports and doing the right cleanup, etc.  Do we have any
  volunteers for that sort of thing?
 
 What kind of volunteers do you want?  Do you want first-level people
 who will filter most of the reports for noise, c., before you get to
 trusty developers, or do you want one or two people who really know
 the code to take the reports and either file them in the bug tracking
 system or in the round bin?
 
 I've seen projects succeed both ways, and that's why I'm asking.
 
 A


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Re: [HACKERS] What do you want me to do?

2003-11-07 Thread Andrew Dunstan


Robert Treat wrote:

On Fri, 2003-11-07 at 15:28, Andrew Dunstan wrote:
 

Marc G. Fournier wrote:

   

On Fri, 7 Nov 2003, Robert Treat wrote:



 

I know most people have talked about using bugzilla, but is anyone
familiar with GNATS?  I'm currently rereading Open Sources and there's a
paragraph or two mentioning it's use and the fact that it can be
interfaced with completely by email.
  

   

FreeBSD uses it almost exclusively and it supports email interaction with
the database, but I don't think there are very many good GUI front ends
for it (or, at least, not that I've seen) ...


 

No.

   

personal axe to grind?  

er, no. I was only agreeing with Marc about GUI interfaces. What axe to 
grind do you imagine I could have? Postgres is a fine product, and I 
have been very glad to find that its development process is very open in 
fact as well as in name. I want to see it succeed. To that end I want to 
free Bruce and Tom and everybody else from as much drudgery as possible 
and at the same time make finding out the state of things easier. That's 
all.

I've never used it, but it's been around a long
time, allows for interaction completely through email (which is how we
do things now), has a web front end for anyone who wants to use it to
use, and as i understand it has a tcl based desktop app for folks to use
as well.  seems it's being dismissed prematurely imho.
Every person wishing to submit a bug will have to have send-pr installed 
or else we'll get lots of reports not broken up into fields. That 
doesn't sound like a recipe for success to me.

 

A few other thoughts:
. the Samba team have apparently abandoned their own tool and moved to 
bugzilla
. if we used bugzilla this might give some impetus to the bugzilla 
team's efforts to provide pg as a backend (maybe we could help with that)
. it would seem slightly strange to me for an RDBMS project to use a bug 
tracking system that was not RDBMS-backed
   

we serve far more static pages on the website than we do database driven
ones... 

*nod* but there has been talk of moving to bricolage, hasn't there?

the software we distribute is housed on fileservers and sent via
ftp, we dont expect people to store and retrieve it from a database...
you're reaching now ...

our mailing lists software actually uses another db product in fact...
let's just get the right tool for the job... 
 

Yes. I agree. Bugs (including enhancements) strike me as a classic case 
of data that belongs in a database.

 

. developers are far more likely to be familiar with bugzilla
   

developers are far more likely to be familiar with windows and mysql as
well...
c'mon ...

 

. are there any active developers without web access? If not, why is 
pure email interaction important?
   

for the same reason mailing lists work better than message boards...
it's just easier. i'm much more likely to read an email list the scroll
through web forms, and if i am going to respond to a bug report, i'm
much mroe likely to if i can hit reply and start typing than if i have
to fire up a browser to do it.
Tom explicitly said he *didn't* want a system where email poured 
straight into the bugtrack db.

Yes, it is a different way of doing things, and it takes getting used to.

 

Bugzilla is far from perfect. But it's getting better.

   

don't get me wrong, i like bugzilla and all, but theres no need to put
blinders on...
I don't. But I do think the current processes can stand improvement.

cheers

andrew

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Re: [HACKERS] What do you want me to do?

2003-11-07 Thread Andrew Dunstan


Dave Cramer wrote:

Jira is a fantastic bug tracking project management system and is
available free of charge for open source projects.
http://www.atlassian.com/software/jira/

 

Wow, that looks very cool indeed! And they are Aussies to boot! :-)

cheers

andreew

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Re: [HACKERS] What do you want me to do?

2003-11-07 Thread Bruce Momjian
Tom Lane wrote:
 Bugzilla already does email output (ie, notify you of changes to bug
 entries you're interested in) well enough.  We thought during the last
 go-round that it was important to have email input so we could allow
 mail to pgsql-bugs to go directly into the tracking system, but in
 hindsight that was a really bad idea.  What we could use instead is for
 someone knowledgeable to commit to transferring *valid* emailed bug
 reports into the tracking system.  Bruce could do that if he wants, but
 there are surely dozens of other people who would be qualified to handle
 this task.

I could do it, but I am not looking for additional work.  I will
continue to maintain the ordinary TODO list until we decide the bug
system is going to work.

-- 
  Bruce Momjian|  http://candle.pha.pa.us
  [EMAIL PROTECTED]   |  (610) 359-1001
  +  If your life is a hard drive, |  13 Roberts Road
  +  Christ can be your backup.|  Newtown Square, Pennsylvania 19073

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Re: [HACKERS] What do you want me to do?

2003-11-07 Thread Marc G. Fournier


On Fri, 7 Nov 2003, Tom Lane wrote:

 Andrew Dunstan [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
  Bugzilla is far from perfect. But it's getting better.

 FWIW, I would like to try a bugzilla-based tracking system for Postgres.
 Our last attempt at a tracking system failed miserably, but I think that
 was (a) because the software we tried was really unpolished, and (b)
 because we let anybody and his pet chihuahua enter bug reports, so the
 signal-to-noise ratio went to zero in no time.

Ya, if I recall correctly, we tried to use Keystone *way* back, cause it
was about all that was available at the time ... and altho I'm the one
that installed it, I didn't particularly like the software either :(


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Re: [HACKERS] What do you want me to do?

2003-11-07 Thread Tom Lane
Andrew Dunstan [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
 Dave Cramer wrote:
 Jira is a fantastic bug tracking project management system and is
 available free of charge for open source projects.

 Wow, that looks very cool indeed! And they are Aussies to boot! :-)

But they don't seem to be on the free-open-source wavelength.
PostgreSQL is free, period.  So is all the software we depend upon.
I don't think we are interested in depending upon code that has this
sort of verbiage about how you are allowed to use it and what it will
cost:
http://www.atlassian.com/software/jira/pricing.jsp

regards, tom lane

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