Hi,
each project is checked for new version once per hour. There is a
service running that is creating a queue from the projects that would be
checked. It was just a coincidence that your project was checked at the
same time you uploaded a new version. But if you are an upstream
maintainer,
Thanks a lot Fabio,
I've done as you suggested! Your swift reply and answer was much
appreciated!
Chris
On Sat, Feb 1, 2020 at 4:24 PM Fabio Valentini wrote:
> On Sat, Feb 1, 2020 at 10:18 PM Chris wrote:
> >
> > > I assume most package maintainers are not simultaneously upstream for
> their
On Sat, Feb 1, 2020 at 10:18 PM Chris wrote:
>
> > I assume most package maintainers are not simultaneously upstream for their
> > packages.
>
> I would definitely agree with that! Just to clarify further, I guess i was
> hoping that Anitya could be smart enough to detect that a bugzilla
> I assume most package maintainers are not simultaneously upstream for
their packages.
I would definitely agree with that! Just to clarify further, I guess i was
hoping that Anitya could be smart enough to detect that a bugzilla wouldn't
be necessary to be created in the event it's found already
On Sat, Feb 1, 2020 at 10:06 PM Chris wrote:
>
> Hi,
>
> I was just curious if there as a way to dial back the Upstream Release
> Monitoring and the automatic Bugzilla ticket generation from it?
>
> I pushed a new release of my software to PyPi and I swear before I even got
> access to the
Hi,
I was just curious if there as a way to dial back the Upstream Release
Monitoring and the automatic Bugzilla ticket generation from it?
I pushed a new release of my software to PyPi and I swear before I even got
access to the shell again (from the successful twine upload message), I was