On 2019-Jul-16, Daniel Gustafsson wrote: > The green gamification dot on people’s Github profiles might light up if the > machine readable format with email address was used (and the user has that > specific email connected to their Github account unless it’s a primary email). > Looking at commit 1c9bb02d8ec1d5b1b319e4fed70439a403c245b1 I can see that for > August 2018 Amit’s Github profile lists “Created 1 commit in 1 repository > postgres/postgres 1 commit”, which is likely from this commit message being > parsed in the mirror.
I specifically use "co-authored-by" (and scanning the grep results, I'm the only person doing it) because github recognizes it in this way. However I only feel entitled to use it when the patch has been developed by me plus some other person(s), which has a bit of a contradictory result: when I don't touch some submitted patch, I use "Author" since I (the committer) am not a co-author. That means github attributes such patches solely to me :-( I realize now, however, that in order for this to work I have to include the email address, not just the name. I failed to do that at least once. -- Álvaro Herrera https://www.2ndQuadrant.com/ PostgreSQL Development, 24x7 Support, Remote DBA, Training & Services