On 7/7/06, Jason Dillon <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
This is applied.
:-)
Took longer than expected because I happened to switch to a terminal
that was set to use JDK 1.5 and I did not realize it... until a few
hours later after I was pulling my hair out wondering why the patch
god hates me so much.
It's because it needs a solution as I think you won't be alone in your
pain of applying patches/changes that are incompatible with the unix
patch command.
I think it would be much better if the person who makes a change is
not the one who commits it to trunk, but the last PMCer who voted for
it. And a branch the change is built from is established. The solution
has such a good effect that the person who works on changes don't have
to worry about the commit date until it's rejected when (s)he or
anyone else will fix it and a vote starts over (with 24-hour time
period). Another good effect is that knowing the revisions a change
that's being voted, one can continue his/her work without worrying
about disrupting the vote process as the revisions are still in the
branch. Phew, I do like the idea! ;-)
WDYT?
--jason
Jacek
--
Jacek Laskowski
http://www.laskowski.net.pl