Hi there, Sorry I was meaning to send an email about the patch as well but time got away from me. The patch was more a way to discuss if this is the "right way" to do it.
I would be more than happy to become a committer and submit right to git / close out the tickets if its easier. Cheers Jake Sent from my phone. > On 11 Dec 2014, at 05:14, Benson Margulies <[email protected]> wrote: > > Other communities are using a workflow in which a JIRA linked to a PR is > good enough (e.g. Lucene), and there's an integration where a commit > comment with a PR # closes the PR. > > So if you want that stuff, we should ask infra@ about it. > > >> On Wed, Dec 10, 2014 at 10:30 AM, Billie Rinaldi <[email protected]> wrote: >> >> No, an ICLA is not necessary for contributions submitted through ASF >> infrastructure. See the definition of Contribution and the section on >> Submission of Contributions in the Apache License v. 2.0 ( >> http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0). >> >> If we want to be able to accept GitHub pull requests, the process is not as >> clear. The first couple of paragraphs under "Reviewing contributor >> changes" on http://accumulo.apache.org/git.html are worth reading. Also >> we >> would need to make sure pull requests trigger an email to the dev list -- >> not sure if that is set up by default, or if we have to request it. >> >>> On Wed, Dec 10, 2014 at 4:41 AM, Joe Witt <[email protected]> wrote: >>> >>> Mentors, >>> >>> For NIFI-154 we received a patch via Jira. I read that this is >> inherently >>> considered a submission that is useable but that was on the webpage of >>> another apache project. Is this correct? Do we need to request ICLAs >>> before we can use these things? >>> >>> Just want to make sure the process of accepting patches is understood. >>> >>> Thanks >>> Joe >>> >>
