Re: Please read: Wine(HQ) needs a reorganization (AppDB, Bugzilla, etc.)

2006-01-19 Thread David Lee Lambert
Joseph Garvin k04jg02 at kzoo.edu writes:

 Tony Lambregts wrote:
 
  It's been there a long time...
 
  http://www.winehq.org/site/forums
 
  look at [Archive 2]
 
 Now actually having looked at gmane, I can say that it's not nearly as 
 newb friendly as a real phpBB forum would be -- it wasn't even 
 immediately obvious that I could post replies, and the option is labeled 
 Followup a term which no modern forum/bulletin board uses anymore and 
 people won't recognize. [...]

It would be easy to set up a forum for wine-user using phpBB and mail2forum.  
The tricky part would be administration.  A poorly-mintained forum could be a 
point-of-entry for spammers,  and might also encourage people to ask questions 
but never check the response.

 That the World of Warcraft thread in the Gentoo Gamer's and Players 
 forum has become the center for discussion for running WoW under wine 
 for ALL distributions I think says something about the newb friendliness 
 of the mailing lists. [...]

And the AppDB page for WoW has a prominent link to the Wine thread in that 
forum.  Wine is a big project,  and all discussion of it needn't be in one 
place.

There are features that I'd like to see in AppDB, Bugzilla and the lists that 
aren't present,  but at this point we've collected so much information that it 
would be a waste to switch to a different system.  

The one step that I think would help the problem you're trying to address is 
something I've suggested before:  add a permissive robots.txt to 
appdb.winehq.org,  and make the one on bugs.winehq.org more open.  That would 
probably lead to fewer duplicate bug-reports as people find similar postings 
using Google or Yahoo.

Incidentally,  I'm posting this via GMane...

--
DLL






Re: Please read: Wine(HQ) needs a reorganization (AppDB, Bugzilla, etc.)

2006-01-19 Thread Tony Lambregts
David Lee Lambert as4109 at wayne.edu writes:

[snip really good stuff]
 
 The one step that I think would help the problem you're trying to address is 
 something I've suggested before:  add a permissive robots.txt to 
 appdb.winehq.org,  and make the one on bugs.winehq.org more open. That 
 would 
 probably lead to fewer duplicate bug-reports as people find similar postings 
 using Google or Yahoo.

Could you submit a patch for these (please)

 
 Incidentally,  I'm posting this via GMane...

same Here ;^)

--

Tony Lambregts






Re: Please read: Wine(HQ) needs a reorganization (AppDB, Bugzilla, etc.)

2006-01-19 Thread Chris Morgan

 The one step that I think would help the problem you're trying to address is
 something I've suggested before:  add a permissive robots.txt to
 appdb.winehq.org,  and make the one on bugs.winehq.org more open.  That 
 would
 probably lead to fewer duplicate bug-reports as people find similar postings
 using Google or Yahoo.


I noticed your first patch.  I had a lot of trouble due to the caching
change patch you submitted previously and since I didn't have time to
verify the robots.txt change carefully I've just put it aside for now.
 If Tony or someone would like to check it I'd be happy to put it into
the repo, I just don't want breakage like last time.

Chris




Re: Please read: Wine(HQ) needs a reorganization (AppDB, Bugzilla, etc.)

2006-01-14 Thread Aric Cyr
Joseph Garvin k04jg02 at kzoo.edu writes:

 
 I actually prefer forums because there's less of a barrier to get 
 started. I can continue working through my browser, and I don't have to 
 setup a message filter.

I don't have external mail or nntp access at work, so I just use
http://news.gmane.org/gmane.comp.emulators.wine.devel

For the most part this operates very similar to any of the forums I regularly
visit.  There are a couple of qwerks, but all in all very easy to use for the
non-NNTP users out there.  If it wasn't for this site I'd never be able to
procrastinate in the office ;)

 Even if there's not a forum where developers participate, but just a 
 forum on winehq for users to help each other, I think that would be much 
 better than no forum. More users have experience with forums than 
 mailing lists, so it's much more likely they'll sign up.

A user forum might be useful.  I'd have to admit there are a lot of new users
who seem to easily manage to find Linux forums.  I see this often on Rage3D's
Linux forums as well as Ubuntu and Gentoo forums.

The problem is that there are already well-established wine forums, currently in
mailing list format, and they will never go away.  So the most likely solution
would be a web-nntp gateway, which is exactly what news.gmane.org is.  Whether
wine decides to host's its own gateway software or not I would leave up to the
winehq admins.

- Aric





Re: Please read: Wine(HQ) needs a reorganization (AppDB, Bugzilla, etc.)

2006-01-14 Thread Joseph Garvin

Aric Cyr wrote:




I don't have external mail or nntp access at work, so I just use
http://news.gmane.org/gmane.comp.emulators.wine.devel
 

I didn't think of that. What about posting a link to the 'Wine Forums' 
on winehq that goes there?





Re: Please read: Wine(HQ) needs a reorganization (AppDB, Bugzilla, etc.)

2006-01-14 Thread Tony Lambregts

Joseph Garvin wrote:

Aric Cyr wrote:




I don't have external mail or nntp access at work, so I just use
http://news.gmane.org/gmane.comp.emulators.wine.devel
 

I didn't think of that. What about posting a link to the 'Wine Forums' 
on winehq that goes there?





It's been there a long time...

http://www.winehq.org/site/forums

look at [Archive 2]

--

Tony Lambregts




Re: Please read: Wine(HQ) needs a reorganization (AppDB, Bugzilla, etc.)

2006-01-14 Thread Joseph Garvin

Tony Lambregts wrote:


It's been there a long time...

http://www.winehq.org/site/forums

look at [Archive 2]

--

Tony Lambregts



That's not very good from a usability standpoint. The gmane link is 
buried as Archive2. It's not at all clear that Archive1 (winehq 
pipermail) doesn't let you post new messages while Archive2 (gmane) 
does. And maybe a more experienced gmane user will correct me, but it 
doesn't look like there's any way to tell what posts are new since your 
last visit.


Now actually having looked at gmane, I can say that it's not nearly as 
newb friendly as a real phpBB forum would be -- it wasn't even 
immediately obvious that I could post replies, and the option is labeled 
Followup a term which no modern forum/bulletin board uses anymore and 
people won't recognize. That, and the option is in the frame displaying 
the list of posts in the thread, and not in the frame containing the 
message body (the thing the user actually perceives they want to reply to).


That the World of Warcraft thread in the Gentoo Gamer's and Players 
forum has become the center for discussion for running WoW under wine 
for ALL distributions I think says something about the newb friendliness 
of the mailing lists. Not to disparage the mailing lists -- they let 
developers use their preferred interface for writing text. But people 
are going to phpBB forums that aren't even for their own distro before 
they e-mail wine-devel.


Even if the forum didn't get much developer participation there would at 
least be a place for all wine users to go, with some nice sticky posts 
detailing how to submit bugs and test against cvs, something other 
forums aren't doing. Wine could probably pick up a lot of good bug 
reports this way.





RE: Please read: Wine(HQ) needs a reorganization (AppDB, Bugzilla, etc.)

2006-01-11 Thread Rolf Kalbermatter
Lionel Ulmer [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 The problem is that (AFAIK) most if not all Wine developpers 
 do not share at all this view (at last for me nothing beats
 either a mailing list or a newsgroups :-) ).
 
 So you will have a nice forum full of Wine questions and no 
 developpers who read them to answer the posts because no-one
 will care actually reading the forum.
 
 I may be wrong though thinking that all other Wine developpers are
 'dinosaurs' like me :-)

While I'm not a very active Wine developer, but participate in other
projects as well, I myself also prefer mailing lists. I can read them
offline anywhere I want without needing an online connection. It allows
you to do research on the question and prepare an answer offline as
well. Forums are more interactive but that is in this respect also
their biggest drawback. I did newsgroups in the past for a forum that
had a news link but some changes to that gateway made the newsgroup
less and less usable.

Rolf Kalbermatter





Re: Please read: Wine(HQ) needs a reorganization (AppDB, Bugzilla, etc.)

2006-01-11 Thread Joseph Garvin
I actually prefer forums because there's less of a barrier to get 
started. I can continue working through my browser, and I don't have to 
setup a message filter.


Even if there's not a forum where developers participate, but just a 
forum on winehq for users to help each other, I think that would be much 
better than no forum. More users have experience with forums than 
mailing lists, so it's much more likely they'll sign up.


Rolf Kalbermatter wrote:


Lionel Ulmer [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 

The problem is that (AFAIK) most if not all Wine developpers 
do not share at all this view (at last for me nothing beats

either a mailing list or a newsgroups :-) ).

So you will have a nice forum full of Wine questions and no 
developpers who read them to answer the posts because no-one

will care actually reading the forum.

I may be wrong though thinking that all other Wine developpers are
'dinosaurs' like me :-)
   



While I'm not a very active Wine developer, but participate in other
projects as well, I myself also prefer mailing lists. I can read them
offline anywhere I want without needing an online connection. It allows
you to do research on the question and prepare an answer offline as
well. Forums are more interactive but that is in this respect also
their biggest drawback. I did newsgroups in the past for a forum that
had a news link but some changes to that gateway made the newsgroup
less and less usable.

Rolf Kalbermatter




 







Re: Please read: Wine(HQ) needs a reorganization (AppDB, Bugzilla, etc.)

2006-01-10 Thread n0dalus
On 1/10/06, Molle Bestefich [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 Switch to Trac, for example.  It will import your Bugzilla bugs in a
 snap and you're ready to go.  User friendly and much simpler and much
 more consistent than Bugzilla.
 http://projects.edgewall.com/trac/


Trac looks interesting, but the demo there seems a bit messy.
Unfortunately it uses SQLite, which may not be able to effectively
handle the huge needs of wine's bug tracking. It says they will try
implement support for other sql servers in later versions, but
currently it doesn't.

n0dalus.




Re: Please read: Wine(HQ) needs a reorganization (AppDB, Bugzilla, etc.)

2006-01-10 Thread n0dalus
On 1/10/06, Molle Bestefich [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

  Unfortunately it uses SQLite, which may not be able to effectively
  handle the huge needs of wine's bug tracking. It says they will try
  implement support for other sql servers in later versions, but
  currently it doesn't.

 Bull...
 There are commercial products out there that handle millions of
 records of data per hour running on SQLite.  I can't quite imagine
 what you're afraid of.


In my experience SQLite has been several times slower than a
well-configured MySQL server when dealing with large record sets,
complex table structures and blob data. Maybe the newer versions of
SQLite have improved on this though.

n0dalus.




Re: Please read: Wine(HQ) needs a reorganization (AppDB, Bugzilla, etc.)

2006-01-10 Thread Lionel Ulmer
On Mon, Jan 09, 2006 at 08:42:06PM -0800, Scott Ritchie wrote:
 Forums are absolutely a good idea. (...)
 The reason is the same reason I post to these forums - they're
 far more usable, well-sorted, and accessable than a mailing list.

The problem is that (AFAIK) most if not all Wine developpers do not share at
all this view (at last for me nothing beats either a mailing list or a
newsgroups :-) ).

So you will have a nice forum full of Wine questions and no developpers who
read them to answer the posts because no-one will care actually reading the
forum.

I may be wrong though thinking that all other Wine developpers are
'dinosaurs' like me :-)

   Lionel

-- 
 Lionel Ulmer - http://www.bbrox.org/




Please read: Wine(HQ) needs a reorganization (AppDB, Bugzilla, etc.)

2006-01-09 Thread S. Schauenburg
On IRC we started a chat on #WineHQ and discussed how to improve Wine.
There were comments made and I wanted to summarize them and ask for
your opinion.
By the way: Who is in charge of WineHQ, AppDB etc.? A list of people
who are responsible for that would be nice (it could be I've missed
that one though).

Back onto the main topic. Remarks made:
1. AppDB needs a revamp. Maybe drop the maintainers (those things just
need to be set by developers only). Just have a look at the activity
of all the maintainers in the last year. **Read on for suggestions to
drop the AppDB.

2. Create a Wine forum. This solves the problem of users asking the
same questions over and over again. Here also the comments of the
AppDB could be centralized (because most of them aren't really
comments)

3. With a forum in place, the user-mailing list could be dropped and
maybe also even the devel-mailing list.

4. Create a Wine Wiki, instead of the AppDB. Only certain developers
(or maybe users) can set/edit certain pages. Then also howto's could
be inserted here.

5. It's too difficult for users to add a bugreport. Either create a
small program/app which does it for the user (like Submit this
bugreport *click*) and you're done. The other option is to create a
simplified method for searching and inserting a bug report, because
from a users view, there are too many options. (and probably the user
wouldn't even know what to click on. Don't forget to give the users
the option to 'add' a file with certain 'debug channels' (which ones?
only +seh?)

6. Users need to know that if they submit a bug report (when it's
simplified) that it actually HELPS you, the developers. So it's Help
us, help you.

What's your opinion about this? In my eyes, it would greatly improve
the user input/feedback and would even make Wine more popular.

Regards,



SWAT




Re: Please read: Wine(HQ) needs a reorganization (AppDB, Bugzilla, etc.)

2006-01-09 Thread Jonathan Ernst
Le lundi 09 janvier 2006 à 15:47 +0100, S. Schauenburg a écrit :
 On IRC we started a chat on #WineHQ and discussed how to improve Wine.
 There were comments made and I wanted to summarize them and ask for
 your opinion.
 By the way: Who is in charge of WineHQ, AppDB etc.? A list of people
 who are responsible for that would be nice (it could be I've missed
 that one though).
 
 Back onto the main topic. Remarks made:
 1. AppDB needs a revamp. Maybe drop the maintainers (those things just
 need to be set by developers only). Just have a look at the activity
 of all the maintainers in the last year. **Read on for suggestions to
 drop the AppDB.

I don't know why you are thinking maintainers should be developers only.
Maintainers are quite active on the AppDB. And new features (like send
test result) are making the job of the maintainers even more easy.

 
 2. Create a Wine forum. This solves the problem of users asking the
 same questions over and over again. Here also the comments of the
 AppDB could be centralized (because most of them aren't really
 comments)
 3. With a forum in place, the user-mailing list could be dropped and
 maybe also even the devel-mailing list.

A mailing list has many advantages over a forum (readable from any nntp
client, etc.).

 
 4. Create a Wine Wiki, instead of the AppDB. Only certain developers
 (or maybe users) can set/edit certain pages. Then also howto's could
 be inserted here.

There are already two Wine Wiki:

http://wiki.winehq.org (official, developper centric)
http://wine-wiki.org/ (more user oriented)

As of dropping the AppDB, I don't see the point ? The AppDB might be
improved but it's a lot more efficient than a simple wiki to track
applications. You can track the bugs linked to a particular application,
get an e-mail each time someone adds something to an application of
interest, ...

 
 5. It's too difficult for users to add a bugreport. Either create a
 small program/app which does it for the user (like Submit this
 bugreport *click*) and you're done. The other option is to create a
 simplified method for searching and inserting a bug report, because
 from a users view, there are too many options. (and probably the user
 wouldn't even know what to click on. Don't forget to give the users
 the option to 'add' a file with certain 'debug channels' (which ones?
 only +seh?)

The bug reporting tool used by Wine is the same used by most Opensource
projects (bugzilla). I don't think this tool is too much complicated but
if it is, it must be fixed upstream.

Dan Kegel has a nice page on how to do QA for Wine though:
http://www.kegel.com/wine/qa/

The integration of this page in WineHQ or in the Wiki has been discussed
on this mailing list.

Jonathan


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Re: Please read: Wine(HQ) needs a reorganization (AppDB, Bugzilla, etc.)

2006-01-09 Thread James Hawkins
On 1/9/06, S. Schauenburg [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 Back onto the main topic. Remarks made:
 1. AppDB needs a revamp. Maybe drop the maintainers (those things just
 need to be set by developers only). Just have a look at the activity
 of all the maintainers in the last year. **Read on for suggestions to
 drop the AppDB.


What is the point of dropping maintainers?  Activity is always
appreciated, but for most apps it doesn't take much.  It either works
out of the box, or the status doesn't really change much over the
releases.  Simply putting up a HOWTO is the most some maintainers need
to do for an app.  The maintainer doesn't need to report back to the
appdb every release to say no regressions have occurred.

 2. Create a Wine forum. This solves the problem of users asking the
 same questions over and over again. Here also the comments of the
 AppDB could be centralized (because most of them aren't really
 comments)


The AppDB comments need to stay where they are.  Each comment is
specific to a particular app and only shows up on that app's page.  We
already have wine-users, bugzilla, and the appdb for users to
communicate about wine.  Adding a forum would spread ourselves too
thin.

 3. With a forum in place, the user-mailing list could be dropped and
 maybe also even the devel-mailing list.


hehe that'll never happen.

 4. Create a Wine Wiki, instead of the AppDB. Only certain developers
 (or maybe users) can set/edit certain pages. Then also howto's could
 be inserted here.


wiki.winehq.org

 5. It's too difficult for users to add a bugreport. Either create a
 small program/app which does it for the user (like Submit this
 bugreport *click*) and you're done. The other option is to create a
 simplified method for searching and inserting a bug report, because
 from a users view, there are too many options. (and probably the user
 wouldn't even know what to click on. Don't forget to give the users
 the option to 'add' a file with certain 'debug channels' (which ones?
 only +seh?)


I don't see how a program would make submitting bugs easier.  I'm
guessing you're thinking about a crash reporter, which would report a
bug with the crash info/backtrace etc, but that would just flood the
bugzilla with duplicate crash-only bugs.  I'm curious as to what
user's find hard about submitting bug reports.  If you know, please
post the issues here.

 6. Users need to know that if they submit a bug report (when it's
 simplified) that it actually HELPS you, the developers. So it's Help
 us, help you.


I agree.

--
James Hawkins




Re: Please read: Wine(HQ) needs a reorganization (AppDB, Bugzilla, etc.)

2006-01-09 Thread n0dalus
On 1/10/06, S. Schauenburg [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 On IRC we started a chat on #WineHQ and discussed how to improve Wine.
 There were comments made and I wanted to summarize them and ask for
 your opinion.
 By the way: Who is in charge of WineHQ, AppDB etc.? A list of people
 who are responsible for that would be nice (it could be I've missed
 that one though).

 Back onto the main topic. Remarks made:
 1. AppDB needs a revamp. Maybe drop the maintainers (those things just
 need to be set by developers only). Just have a look at the activity
 of all the maintainers in the last year. **Read on for suggestions to
 drop the AppDB.

 2. Create a Wine forum. This solves the problem of users asking the
 same questions over and over again. Here also the comments of the
 AppDB could be centralized (because most of them aren't really
 comments)

 3. With a forum in place, the user-mailing list could be dropped and
 maybe also even the devel-mailing list.

I think a forum is a good idea, but the lists are invaluable. Please
don't remove the lists. I think you'll find many developers prefer
mailing lists anyway, as they can use their own mail clients and
setups and have the posts delivered to them instead of having to go to
some forum.


 4. Create a Wine Wiki, instead of the AppDB. Only certain developers
 (or maybe users) can set/edit certain pages. Then also howto's could
 be inserted here.

 5. It's too difficult for users to add a bugreport. Either create a
 small program/app which does it for the user (like Submit this
 bugreport *click*) and you're done. The other option is to create a
 simplified method for searching and inserting a bug report, because
 from a users view, there are too many options. (and probably the user
 wouldn't even know what to click on. Don't forget to give the users
 the option to 'add' a file with certain 'debug channels' (which ones?
 only +seh?)

Bugzilla is not hard to use as it is, maybe we just need to have more
tutorials and info, and a link to it when an app crashes.


 6. Users need to know that if they submit a bug report (when it's
 simplified) that it actually HELPS you, the developers. So it's Help
 us, help you.

 What's your opinion about this? In my eyes, it would greatly improve
 the user input/feedback and would even make Wine more popular.


Other than those things, most of the ideas here I agree with to some extent.

Just my $0.015,
n0dalus.




Re: Please read: Wine(HQ) needs a reorganization (AppDB, Bugzilla, etc.)

2006-01-09 Thread Chris Morgan
On 1/9/06, S. Schauenburg [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 On IRC we started a chat on #WineHQ and discussed how to improve Wine.
 There were comments made and I wanted to summarize them and ask for
 your opinion.
 By the way: Who is in charge of WineHQ, AppDB etc.? A list of people
 who are responsible for that would be nice (it could be I've missed
 that one though).

 Back onto the main topic. Remarks made:
 1. AppDB needs a revamp. Maybe drop the maintainers (those things just
 need to be set by developers only). Just have a look at the activity
 of all the maintainers in the last year. **Read on for suggestions to
 drop the AppDB.

I have mail from the many thousands of changes to the appdb that have
occurred in the last few months, I even deleted some 10k+ of them just
a few weeks ago.  Its more active now than it has ever been :-)

Chris




Re: Please read: Wine(HQ) needs a reorganization (AppDB, Bugzilla, etc.)

2006-01-09 Thread Tom Spear (aka Dustin Navea)
I disagree with both sides of the forum issue..  I think that depending 
on how it is implemented, it could go either way..


There are forum software's out there that will send you a mail 
(including what was said) whenever a section is replied to..  Which 
means you just subscribe to the wine-devel section for example and any 
new threads will be emailed to you, as well as replies to the ones 
already posted..


And I'm sure someone here could write something so that you could reply 
to the email and have a script send whatever you wrote to the forum for you.


Of course at the same time, you have to worry about forum db crashes (i 
know we have all heard of that happening from time to time)..



Bug searching is harder than it needs to be.  I personally have made a 
custom search to find bugs that i have reported, and bugs that are 
assigned to me, just because the my bugs and bugs by me links dont find 
all of them..  Plus, when searching for an app-specific crash, searching 
thru just the summary doesn't always work, as user may post the err 
message on the console, so then you need to create a custom search thru 
the comments as well.  And most users who are searching for a bug dont 
care what the status of the bug is, they want to search all bugs, in 
case it has a known workaround..


So here are my recommendations for bugzilla, obviously these would have 
to be implemented by mozilla, but we'll worry about that later.


1) Create a simplified mode and advanced mode, and if the user hasn't 
specified which mode they want, then default to simplified.  Advanced 
mode would be the search as it is now, simplified mode would be the 
modifications below:


2) At the top of the page, change the word summary to Search for:  and 
make the text field next to it search thru all comment and summary 
fields, and if possible, textonly attachments, and put a link to the 
advanced search.


3) Remove the following sections: component, status, resolution, 
severity, priority, hardware, os, email and numbering, and bug changes, 
as well as the advanced querying section. That way it is more 
google-ish, which is what users want..


For entering new bugs, the following changes should be implemented:

1) Remove component altogether, or make it a little more clear at 
least.  If I am entering a bug for an app crash, and it doesnt use 
directx, for the most part i use wine-misc, which doesnt help anyone 
out.  At the very least if it does stay in there, put an unknown 
component in the list so i can pick unknown and change it later, once 
the area in question is discovered.


2) Allow us to attach a file on the main bug entry page, so we can 
attach the trace and comment the trace at the same time, instead of 
having to file the report, and then go back to the bug to attach the log.


3) Change the default for platform to PC, the default for os to linux, 
and remove the windows entries from os.


4) Remove priority and severity.

Anything that I have asked to be removed from the enter bug form should 
be left in the actual report, but should be allowed to be changed or set 
by regular users, only by developers, and people with the change flags 
set (bugzilla maintainers)..


Thats all I can think of for the user-friendliness factor in those 
areas.  I should add that the appdb is flooded with bug reports, which 
doesnt look good for wine.  I say we reset the appdb comments to null, 
and pot a note at the top of every page in red letters that says 
Problems using a particular app?  Click here!  and make Click here! be 
a link to bugzilla's bug report page.  That will reduce the number of 
bug reports in the comments.  Then each app maintainer should put a note 
at the top of their app pages saying If you have a problem using this 
app, please (do such and such)  where such and such is whatever the 
maintainer would prefer, either email them privately, or file a bug 
report, or write to wine-devel, or anything other than complain about it 
in that app's thread.  That would make wine look a lot more 
user-friendly, as new users can see hey this app works, and there arent 
any issues with it, or they can see hey this app partially works, but 
any problems i have can be easily reported, and people aren't bashing 
wine about lack of support for that app.


ANYWAYS this email has gotten longer than I planned, and my hands are 
starting to hurt, so please, comments or suggestions, send em my way.


Tom

S. Schauenburg wrote:


OK, but I mean (don't hit me for this) take a look at Cedega. They
have a forum and a wiki and have loads of user input. This generates
(inter)activity of users and 'promotes' the application in a certain
way, people like to tell other people something finally works :-)

5. First you need to search for a bug. A normal user wouldn't know
what things to select and would need to 'guess' where to fill in the
keywords etc. The search form looks threatening/scary, so it needs to
be simplified into (for example) 

Re: Please read: Wine(HQ) needs a reorganization (AppDB, Bugzilla, etc.)

2006-01-09 Thread Molle Bestefich
Tom Spear (aka Dustin Navea) wrote:
 ANYWAYS this email has gotten longer than I planned, and my hands are
 starting to hurt, so please, comments or suggestions, send em my way.

Maybe the reason that your mail is so long is that it's an impossible
feat to save that zilla.

Let's pronounce that monstrosity from the past dead and start using a
better product.

Switch to Trac, for example.  It will import your Bugzilla bugs in a
snap and you're ready to go.  User friendly and much simpler and much
more consistent than Bugzilla.
http://projects.edgewall.com/trac/

The administrator can define custom reports, they're available under 
 View Tickets .
Click this and see.

Instead of the custom script you talk of, now choose   Custom Query
, add a reporter filter and set it to yourself.  Can also be used
in URL fashion like this:
http://projects.edgewall.com/trac/query?reporter=jonas

Lots of other niceties too.
There's an integrated Wiki where you make inline references to the
ticket system.  Or inline references to the source code, which is also
conveniently browsable in Trac.  You can search across tickets, source
code commits and the wiki with a simple google-like search box.  You
can even keep your product manual in the wiki like the Trac project
does (see http://projects.edgewall.com/trac/wiki/TracGuide).  There's
even a plugin for making the wiki DOCBOOK compatible somewhere. 
Possibilities seems endless.




Re: Please read: Wine(HQ) needs a reorganization (AppDB, Bugzilla, etc.)

2006-01-09 Thread Tom Spear (aka Dustin Navea)

Perhaps we should check this out?  Anyone?

Tom

Molle Bestefich wrote:


Tom Spear (aka Dustin Navea) wrote:
 


ANYWAYS this email has gotten longer than I planned, and my hands are
starting to hurt, so please, comments or suggestions, send em my way.
   



Maybe the reason that your mail is so long is that it's an impossible
feat to save that zilla.

Let's pronounce that monstrosity from the past dead and start using a
better product.

Switch to Trac, for example.  It will import your Bugzilla bugs in a
snap and you're ready to go.  User friendly and much simpler and much
more consistent than Bugzilla.
http://projects.edgewall.com/trac/

The administrator can define custom reports, they're available under 
 View Tickets .

Click this and see.

Instead of the custom script you talk of, now choose   Custom Query
 


, add a reporter filter and set it to yourself.  Can also be used
   


in URL fashion like this:
http://projects.edgewall.com/trac/query?reporter=jonas

Lots of other niceties too.
There's an integrated Wiki where you make inline references to the
ticket system.  Or inline references to the source code, which is also
conveniently browsable in Trac.  You can search across tickets, source
code commits and the wiki with a simple google-like search box.  You
can even keep your product manual in the wiki like the Trac project
does (see http://projects.edgewall.com/trac/wiki/TracGuide).  There's
even a plugin for making the wiki DOCBOOK compatible somewhere. 
Possibilities seems endless.


 







Re: Please read: Wine(HQ) needs a reorganization (AppDB, Bugzilla, etc.)

2006-01-09 Thread Chris Morgan
We use trac where I work and users that would normally be unable to
use bugzilla appear to have success with the simpler interface of
trac.

Chris


 
 Switch to Trac, for example.  It will import your Bugzilla bugs in a
 snap and you're ready to go.  User friendly and much simpler and much
 more consistent than Bugzilla.
 http://projects.edgewall.com/trac/
 
 The administrator can define custom reports, they're available under
  View Tickets .
 Click this and see.
 




Re: Please read: Wine(HQ) needs a reorganization (AppDB, Bugzilla, etc.)

2006-01-09 Thread Jesse Allen
On 1/9/06, Jonathan Ernst [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 I don't know why you are thinking maintainers should be developers only.
 Maintainers are quite active on the AppDB. And new features (like send
 test result) are making the job of the maintainers even more easy.



I have doubts about the user submitted test results.  I think its
discouraging proper bug reporting.  Like the current test on the
diablo 2 node:
http://appdb.winehq.org/appview.php?versionId=49

I really think there's something wrong with his wine setup.  What's
worse is there is no way to find who sent it.  It would be better for
people to submit their test problems to bugzilla, and have the bug
links added to the db entry.

(PS, I must have been removed as maintainer in the db by mistake,
because it doesn't show any maintained under my account anymore)




Re: Please read: Wine(HQ) needs a reorganization (AppDB, Bugzilla, etc.)

2006-01-09 Thread Marcus Meissner
On Mon, Jan 09, 2006 at 06:48:26PM +0100, Molle Bestefich wrote:
 Tom Spear (aka Dustin Navea) wrote:
  ANYWAYS this email has gotten longer than I planned, and my hands are
  starting to hurt, so please, comments or suggestions, send em my way.
 
 Maybe the reason that your mail is so long is that it's an impossible
 feat to save that zilla.
 
 Let's pronounce that monstrosity from the past dead and start using a
 better product.

You are not a user of bugzilla, at least for WINE.

The number of new bugs is definitely not an issue, we get more than enough
good bugreports.

Ciao, Marcus




Re: Please read: Wine(HQ) needs a reorganization (AppDB, Bugzilla, etc.)

2006-01-09 Thread Jesse Allen
On 1/9/06, S. Schauenburg [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 By the way, I hate the AppDB comments/summarize where people put a
 error log or something into the comment and/or the summary (under what
 doesn't work) This clearly states that people aren't using
 bugzilla. So if we (Wine) would be a bit more user-friendly I guess it
 would get the ball rolling.


Yes, this is why I have stated in the very beginning of the War3 howto
to report problems to bugzilla.  All the logs were filling up the
comments block making very long, and I'd say that none of them have
ever been seriously looked at.  With the test results section, they
are starting to put it there now and only the appdb maintainers see
anyways. If people filed reports in bugzilla, more people would see
it, and we can actually interact with the user easier.




Re: Please read: Wine(HQ) needs a reorganization (AppDB, Bugzilla, etc.)

2006-01-09 Thread Molle Bestefich
n0dalus wrote:
 Trac looks interesting, but the demo there seems a bit messy.

The demo has write access for anonymous users, so yes.
Look at the Trac project's own ticket system instead.

Perhaps try one of these URLs.
http://projects.edgewall.com/trac/report
http://projects.edgewall.com/trac/search
http://projects.edgewall.com/trac/browser/trunk
http://projects.edgewall.com/trac/log/trunk

Or a couple of the weirder ones:
automatic timeline -
http://projects.edgewall.com/trac/timeline?daysback=14milestone=onticket=onchangeset=on
automatic changelog generation -
http://projects.edgewall.com/trac/log/trunk?format=changelog

I'll agree any day that Trac has less features than Bugzilla.

I just think that extending Trac with any features needed is a lot
easier than making Bugzilla remotely usable :-).

 Unfortunately it uses SQLite, which may not be able to effectively
 handle the huge needs of wine's bug tracking. It says they will try
 implement support for other sql servers in later versions, but
 currently it doesn't.

Bull...
There are commercial products out there that handle millions of
records of data per hour running on SQLite.  I can't quite imagine
what you're afraid of.




Re: Please read: Wine(HQ) needs a reorganization (AppDB, Bugzilla, etc.)

2006-01-09 Thread Mike McCormack


S. Schauenburg wrote:

On IRC we started a chat on #WineHQ and discussed how to improve Wine.
There were comments made and I wanted to summarize them and ask for
your opinion.


My comments:

* It would be nice to have a checkbox:

  [x] installs and works with Wine and a fresh ~/.wine

 This is the most valuable kind of application for regression testing, 
and the target Wine should aim for.  Apps that require copying windows 
dlls into ~/.wine and tweaking the configuration are prone to breaking, 
and the breakage tells us little about Wine regressions, especially as 
it's not always recorded which set of native dlls/configuration the app 
worked with.


Secondly encouraging users to use windows dlls reduces the chances that 
they will find and report bugs with the Wine dlls, or that they will 
figure out that their application works without those dlls.


* Minor problems with the app screenshots

 The screenshots screen (eg. [1]) has too many boxes and requires too 
many clicks to see a screenshot.  IMO, it would be a little cleaner to 
just show the first screenshot here, and have a [prev] and [next] 
link or quick index.


Other than that, the App DB looks great, and it's great work :)

Mike


[1] http://appdb.winehq.org/screenshots.php?appId=1567versionId=





Re: Please read: Wine(HQ) needs a reorganization (AppDB, Bugzilla, etc.)

2006-01-09 Thread Scott Ritchie
On Tue, 2006-01-10 at 01:55 +1030, n0dalus wrote:
 On 1/10/06, S. Schauenburg [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
  2. Create a Wine forum. This solves the problem of users asking the
  same questions over and over again. Here also the comments of the
  AppDB could be centralized (because most of them aren't really
  comments)
 
  3. With a forum in place, the user-mailing list could be dropped and
  maybe also even the devel-mailing list.
 
 I think a forum is a good idea, but the lists are invaluable. Please
 don't remove the lists. I think you'll find many developers prefer
 mailing lists anyway, as they can use their own mail clients and
 setups and have the posts delivered to them instead of having to go to
 some forum.

Forums are absolutely a good idea.  I can't tell you how many
Wine-related posts I find on places like the Ubuntu forums,
Linux-gamers, and even Something Awful's Serious Hardware/Software Crap
forum.  The reason is the same reason I post to these forums - they're
far more usable, well-sorted, and accessable than a mailing list.  

I brought this up about a year ago when I pointed out that the whole
reason websites with forums such as Frankscorner had popped up was
because we weren't supplying forums at winehq, but nothing ever happened
because of it as we assumed that fixing the AppDB would take care of
that problem.  It hasn't - there's still a lot to say about Wine, and it
ain't happening there.

Thanks,
Scott Ritchie

Thanks,
Scott Ritchie