> Where does the GitHub Projects reside?
Per repo and per Organization
> To me the core OS one was the right place, but that
seems to be off the table, I fail to see how tracking a release including
the apps (especially if the tickets are open against the apps project) is
tainting the quality of the OS.
I think there is a perception that "How good" the OS is should not be judged
by "How good" the apps are.
So 10 Issues all on Apps and 1 issue against the OS but all logged in the OS
repo is what is meeting resistance.
Call it "quality inferences"
Myself, I do not share that point of view. In my view: an App or OS bug is
still a problem if we are using both OS and APPs.
I think about where issues belong more as a matter of compartmentalization
and not quality inferences:
Having apps that has issues focuses the conversation on APPS.
Having OS that has issues focuses the conversation on the OS.
If a user does not use apps then why tell them of all the issues in the OS
repo?
If there is linkage use Markup to link them [Effects APP](url) and [Effects
OS](url) and that is all that is needed to cross reference them.
David
-----Original Message-----
From: Brennan Ashton [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Wednesday, January 15, 2020 10:24 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [DISCUSS]Bug Tracking
On Wed, Jan 15, 2020, 10:09 AM David Sidrane <[email protected]>
wrote:
> +1 for Github issues per repo.
>
> Repos can be cross referenced in markup.
> Assignees can be assigned
> labels can be assigned.
> Projects (roll up across repos) can be assigned.
> Milestones can be assigned.
> UI is simple and effective Query by any of the above attributes.
> The interfaces is present when on Github - there is no need secondary
> login/account
> The content can be rich.
>
Where does the GitHub Projects reside? What I was pushing for was a single
place not per repo. To me the core OS one was the right place, but that
seems to be off the table, I fail to see how tracking a release including
the apps (especially if the tickets are open against the apps project) is
tainting the quality of the OS.
--Brennan
>