Bijan Parsia bparsia@email.unc.edu wrote:
I started doing a few of these things but then realized that I had No Good Place To Put Them. I could, of course, do the old go out and find the right web page, contact someone, send [BUG]s and [FIX]s and set up a Swiki page...ugh. No! I'm feeling lazy. I want *SqueakMap* to do this for me. SqueakMap is *magic*...it can fix *anything*.
This is one thing a bug database is good for. One of the things I really enjoy about Debian is that each package gets its own bug tracking area. Each bug has an email thread associated with it, and each bug has a status (open, fixed, re-assigned to another package, ...), and each bug has various flags such as enhancement vs. wishlist, patch included, etc. Go browse around bug.debian.org to see what it looks like.
We could possibly use the Debian bug tracker with no changes whatsoever. We could probably just set up our own archive on squeakfoundation.org somewhere.
The alternative of simulating a bug database using subcategories sounds pretty hackish, when one consideres that there is a very functional and well thought-out solution that shouldn't need any special tweaking to get started. Down the road, we might want to add a Squeak-based interface to the database, but WWW and email should be okay for getting started.
Now, if someone knows a better bug database, that is fine as well. For example, maybe we could swipe the SourceForge database. But I'm pretty sure the Debian one would be a drop-in solution for what we need.
-Lex