Yeah, the whole git-on-top-of-svn thing seems to lead to people holding off commits till things are fully ready to go. This is not the way I like to work (even though I really enjoy git capabilities). Not sure how people work on SVN-less git projects? Do they publish an up- to-date clone of their local repo on git-hub or something?

I am personally trying to commit as often as possible without breaking the trunk, but still, there has to be a better way...

Andrus


On Nov 18, 2008, at 3:00 PM, Aristedes Maniatis wrote:
On 18/11/2008, at 9:34 PM, Andrus Adamchik wrote:

I don't care that much about the @Ignore annotation, as I am using git, so I keep all my failing tests in the local repo, but I certainly have no objections to the upgrade idea in general.

That's great you've kept them in git, I was wondering where they went. But if we use the @ignore then they would be more visible to others who might be inspired to fix them or be aware of the failing test.

No big deal, just a thought.

Ari



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