In normal usage, poeple send bug reports all the time from production systems. When I report MATE issues back to the Github sources they are from a production system that is also a development/hacking system, made possibly by a total backup partition and rollback root fs images. Always they are manual reports from local builds, and always any log files are looked over by myself prior to posting.
On 4/15/2016 at 1:02 PM, "Len Ovens" <[email protected]> wrote: > >On Fri, 15 Apr 2016, Ralf Mardorf wrote: > >> But the OP should care what is send by this command line tool, >most >> likely the OP dislike to send credit card information and >passwords. > >Creditcard info? passwords? Testing should be done on a clean >install. I >suggest a clean install, user name "Joe Blow" password "testing" >for an >install to test things with. Sending bug reports from a daily use >system >may mean some change you have made is the problem rather than the >SW >itself. Making the bug happen on a clean install is best and >easiest to >debug. It is unfortunate that ubiquity does not have an install >option >that creates a 20G partition for test installs. (but then it would >probably confuse to many people <sigh>) > > >-- >Len Ovens >www.ovenwerks.net > > >-- >ubuntu-studio-devel mailing list >[email protected] >Modify settings or unsubscribe at: >https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-studio-devel -- ubuntu-studio-devel mailing list [email protected] Modify settings or unsubscribe at: https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-studio-devel
