Hi Craig and all, At Wed, 20 Sep 2006 08:42:48 +1000, Craig Small wrote: > > On Mon, Sep 18, 2006 at 07:48:08AM -0700, tony mancill wrote: > > This is up to you; I've done it both ways in the past. If the bug is > > affects the usability of the package, and it could take a while to fix it, > > go ahead and report the bug to the BTS. That will let other users know that > > the maintainer is aware of the issue. You may even be able to describe a > > workaround in the bug report. If the bug is trivial or purely aesthetic > > then the bug report would be less useful. However, it doesn't hurt to file > > a bug report, even if the issue is very minor, so if you're in doubt, I > > would suggest filing one. > > I would have to second what Tony says above. I maintain packages as a > Debian developer and as upstream and yes while there is no rule about it > Tony's description is a pretty good way of determining what you can do. > > Another way of looking at it is; would the bug report be useful to users > of your package. This could be either because they know it is not just > their system, because you have put in a work-around or so that they know > Debian/upstream is aware of it.
I could understand on the back of you. I'd like to report my bugs soon. Thanks, Satoru -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]