On Fri, 6 Jan 2006 21:53, Jo Rhett wrote: > > you mean? Are you claiming someone from (or claiming to be from core) > > said "Don't do this, we won't allow it"? If so, can you supply proof? > > I used to write a lot of patches to freebsd. I used to submit a lot of bug > reports. I've found over the years that unless you have gotten > pre-agreement from others about the nature of the patch, or agreement to > focus on the problem, neither one amounts to a hill of beans. Installation > problems that existed in 4.4 are still alive and well in the 6.0 installer, > for example. <shrugs> That is not my experience. > How FreeBSD "works" is by getting someone in the core team to care about > the issue. No amount of problem reports, patches or code will generate > even a millimeter of movement otherwise. You are mistaking core_at_ for developers_at_.. Like I've said before, core is largely irrelevant in FreeBSD when it comes to deciding what stuff gets added. > I've written far too much code for various freebsd problems, and it has > always been ignored. Not rejected, ignored. Unless someone with commit > rights thinks it's a good idea, writing code for freebsd is a waste of > time. Yes.. and those people AREN'T CORE. Please, please stop confusing your terms, it makes the discussion much harder than it needs to be. You ARE right if what you mean is that "We need interested committers to help thrash out a system for making upgrades simpler". I imagine there are a few committers interested, but I'd say you need to ask the right way first.. -- Daniel O'Connor software and network engineer for Genesis Software - http://www.gsoft.com.au "The nice thing about standards is that there are so many of them to choose from." -- Andrew Tanenbaum GPG Fingerprint - 5596 B766 97C0 0E94 4347 295E E593 DC20 7B3F CE8C
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