On Thu, 22 Apr 2010 11:47:13 -0400, Jameson Rollins <jrollins@finestructure.net> wrote: > I now think it is essential that we put together a bug tracker for > notmuch. Things are moving pretty quickly now, which is great, but as > the UI is frequently changing, I'm stumbling upon lots of little bugs. > As I don't have the time to stop what I'm doing and figure out patches > for them all, we really need some way to report and track issues. I > really think this is essential moving forward. > > I have used things like trac and redmine in the past and they work quite > well. I don't have any other useful suggestions. One of the newfangled > git-based distributed bug trackers could be cool, but I've never used > one, or gotten any feedback from anyone who has. > It was thinking along these lines that got me to make the following list http://www.cs.unb.ca/~bremner/blog/posts/git-issue-trackers/ If people think the general concept of a distributed bug tracker is worthwhile, I'm willing to investigate a more. Feel free to cc bremner-comment-blog~posts~git-issue-trackers@pivot.cs.unb.ca If you have comments about distributed bug trackers; this semi-automatically gets added to the comments page. So far, a few Debian people have endorsed "simple defects". d