But they can already do that, by subscribing to the respective mailing list
(obviously, the bot posts to the list as well as forwarding to the
maintainer) and running the mails through a filter of their choice.
> In the simplest configuration nothing would change for Linus, but patches
> wouldn't get lost and people could be notified if their patch was applied
> or if it doesn't apply anymore.
OK, it would be nice, but you wouldn't want to pile on so many features that
this never gets implemented would you? The minimal thing that forwards and
posts patches is what we need now. Like any other software it can be
improved over time.
> Other people have a place to search for patches and they can check whether
> something was already fixed.
Automating the applied/dropped status is clearly the next problem to tackle,
but that's harder, it involves behavioral changes on the maintainers side.
(Pragmatically, providing a web interface so somebody whose job it is to do
that, can efficiently post 'applied' messages to the list would get the job
done without making anyone learn new tools or change the way they work.)
By the way, who is going to code this? Or are we determined to make
ourselves look like wankers once again, by putting considerably more time
into the lkml flamewar than goes into producing working code?
(Hint: I am not going to code it, nor should I since I should be working in
the kernel.)
-- Daniel - To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in the body of a message to majordomo@vger.kernel.org More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html Please read the FAQ at http://www.tux.org/lkml/