Re: networking bugs and bugme.osdl.org

From: Andries Brouwer (aebr@win.tue.nl)
Date: Sun Jun 29 2003 - 16:45:58 EST


On Sun, Jun 29, 2003 at 02:15:28PM -0700, David S. Miller wrote:

> From: Alan Cox <alan@lxorguk.ukuu.org.uk>
> Date: 28 Jun 2003 00:04:30 +0100
>
> You are assuming there is a relationship in bug severity/commonness
> and number of *developers* who hit it.
>
> Not true, the assumption I make is that a bug report that
> a bug reporter cares about, and a patch that a patch submitter
> cares about, will all get resent if they get dropped.
>
> If the reporter/submitter doesn't care, neither do I.

You are right, but only in the part where you say that this
is the best, indeed the only, way you can work.

Alan is right, information is important, and a lot of it is
submitted only once. (And a lot of it is submitted three times
and ignored three times.)

Suppose you find a gcc bug, construct a small example that
is mistranslated and send it off to the gcc list. Maybe even
include a fix. Will you babysit them, check whether later snapshots
correct this flaw, resubmit your report every month if not?
Maybe you will. I certainly don't - send the report and that's it.

Andries

-
To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in
the body of a message to majordomo@vger.kernel.org
More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html
Please read the FAQ at http://www.tux.org/lkml/



This archive was generated by hypermail 2b29 : Mon Jun 30 2003 - 22:00:32 EST