As a user and someone who occassional submits bug reports and patches, I don't
see any difference to being a TLP. When I went looking for a content manager 3
years ago, I found slide using google and browsing the Apache site. I can't
imagine choosing a CM without a lot of research and the diff
I noticed in the last couple of days submissions to SVN for the first time in a
long time (yea!). Are you just submitting stuff you are working on or will you
be pulling patches from Bugzilla? Is there something that should be done to
increase the chance that a patch will be applied? Should p
stored in work ?
2005/11/22, Ray Sprinkle <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
> A little more info for the pool: Slide transactions are tracked as a special
> type of lock in the lock table (or file).
>
> -Original Message-
> From: Guillaume Bailleul [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> S
A little more info for the pool: Slide transactions are tracked as a special
type of lock in the lock table (or file).
-Original Message-
From: Guillaume Bailleul [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Tuesday, November 22, 2005 10:11 AM
To: Slide Developers Mailing List
Subject: Re: transact
I am using the RDBMS store and it has the same problem with respect to
role and group membership. The membership list is stored as a single
property instead of a collection. This causes scalability problems for
large groups/roles and limits the databases ability to do efficient
membership search
that.
-Original Message-
From: Fabrice Dewasmes [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Friday, October 21, 2005 11:39 AM
To: Slide Developers Mailing List
Subject: Re: BUG in versioning helper
Ray Sprinkle wrote:
>I share your concern about the dev team. I use slide at work and have been
>
I share your concern about the dev team. I use slide at work and have been
submitting small patches and helping on the user list but have seen no activity
from the committers.
There is a limit to how much time I can contribute but I would like to see the
project moving forward again. Slide