Hello Ian, > I've noticed that I'm getting two copies of some BitBucket issue > notifications. The first is from > [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]> because I > am subscribed to that mailing list, and all the issue notifications > go to it. The second is directly from BitBucket, and it is sent > because I have interacted with an issue, so BitBucket assumes I am > interested and "watches" the issue for me. Yes, I have the same problems (or had, right now I filter out the direct bitbucket ones and keep on the trac list ones).
> I think the solution is to unsubscribe from > [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]> and instead > enable issue notifications from the tickets repository in bitbucket. Sure. No one is forced to subscribe to any mailing list and the trac list is "read-only" anyway (ie no one is supposed to post to it). > Given this situation, is there still value in having > trac@einsteintoolkit,org? I would imagine that people who want to > see *all* ticket activity from the ET project will likely have a > bitbucket account so they can interact with the code, and hence can > enable direct bitbucket notifications. I am in the same situation as you are and it is rather annoying. The usefulness (for me, who is involved in many parts of the ET) of having the mailing list is for it serve as a central collector for all ET related tickets. Right now multiple different repositories send trac like tickets emails there (Kranc and the ET main tickets repo at least). Another (future) use is comments on pull requests (or even commits) which are ticket-like but are linked to their own "parent" repository (and few people watch every single one of them and add new watches as new ones are created). This would be a benenfit once (which we have not yet) we get around to also hooking up pull request comments to the same mailing list (not that it is hard, just more php scripting). The other reasons (for me) to keep subscribed to [email protected] is that bitbucket does not send me emails about my own posts to tickets. And while I may at the point of making the comment remember what I said, being able to search my email logs for all posts is useful. Yours, Roland -- My email is as private as my paper mail. I therefore support encrypting and signing email messages. Get my PGP key from http://keys.gnupg.net.
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