The repository commits are a separate list, but everything else goes
through dev@, and in the normal course, everything must. Much of the
development discussions take place on the issue tickets, and if you
are not following the issue tickets, then you miss huge chunks of the
development talks.

These type of reorganizations are rare, maybe every year or three.

-Ted.

On 12/12/05, Patrick Lightbody <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> :( It kind of killed my gmail inbox (I like to keep almost everything
> yanked). Because gmail doesn't have a good interface for yanking
> these things more than 50 at a time, it'll be a tedious task to clean
> up.
>
> Any chance we can break these lists up so some of us can opt out of
> receiving them? I prefer RSS feeds for source control changes anyway
> (ideally though FishEye).
>
> Patrick
>
> On Dec 12, 2005, at 3:10 PM, Frank W. Zammetti wrote:
>
> > I hadn't noticed... Did I miss a few messages?
> >
> > ;) LOL ;)
> >
> > Frank
> >
> > Martin Cooper wrote:
> >> Hi folks,
> >> You might have noticed a bit of a spike in the volume of Bugzilla
> >> change
> >> notifications yesterday. OK, OK, so there was a massive spike of
> >> thousands
> >> of messages. ;-) Sorry about that. We were changing the category and
> >> milestone elements in Bugzilla, and thus recategorising thousands
> >> of bugs
> >> into new categories and new milestones. You can see a summary of
> >> the changes
> >> we made in Don's message from a couple of weeks ago:
> >> http://mail-archives.apache.org/mod_mbox/struts-dev/200512.mbox/%
> >> [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> >> Again, sorry for all the noise. It shouldn't happen again. ;-)
> >> --
> >> Martin Cooper

---------------------------------------------------------------------
To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Reply via email to