summaryrefslogtreecommitdiff
path: root/doc
diff options
context:
space:
mode:
Diffstat (limited to 'doc')
-rw-r--r--doc/todo/Better_bug_tracking_support.mdwn19
1 files changed, 19 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/doc/todo/Better_bug_tracking_support.mdwn b/doc/todo/Better_bug_tracking_support.mdwn
index 577da2dc3..2b281d4b1 100644
--- a/doc/todo/Better_bug_tracking_support.mdwn
+++ b/doc/todo/Better_bug_tracking_support.mdwn
@@ -27,3 +27,22 @@ be embedded to the source code repository commit messages.
> bug's page, tag it `done`, and commit that along with the bug fix.
>
> --[[Joey]]
+
+>> I think a little bit more structure than in a normal wiki would be
+>> good to have for bug tracking. Bug numbers, automatic timestamps on comments
+>> and maybe an email interface would be nice. The resulting page may not
+>> look like a wikipage anymore, but rather something like the Debian
+>> BTS web-interface, but it would still benefit from wikilinks to the
+>> documentation in the wiki etc.
+>>
+>> About the commit message interface: I was thinking about a project
+>> architecture where the code is kept in a separate revision control
+>> system branch than the metadata (blog, wiki, BTS). This would IMHO
+>> be a cleaner solution for distributing the source and making releases
+>> etc. For this kind of setup, having the BTS scan the messages of the
+>> source branch (by a commit-hook for example) would be useful.
+>>
+>> By Google BTS, do you mean the issue tracker in the Google code
+>> project hosting?
+>>
+>> --Teemu \ No newline at end of file