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9:35 AM
Does anyone here own or has owned an Eco-drive? I didn't know watches could be powered by solar batteries. I guess I've been out of the loop.
 
 
3 hours later…
12:29 PM
I just submitted bugs.debian.org/967025
Is doing a PR on salsa (which seems to be where development repositories now live) by non-developers/maintainers a thing?
 
12:40 PM
@FaheemMitha yes, it is, and for a Python-team-maintained package there’s even a very good chance it will be merged ;-)
 
@StephenKitt Would a first step be to get an account on Salsa? Or something else?
BTW, there are apparently two different Python YAML libraries, which is unfortunate.
One forked from the other some time back. So now I need to decide which one to use.
 
@FaheemMitha yes, get an account, and edit the project (you can create a merge request in-browser, which is very handy for a small fix such as this one)
 
People say choice is good. But choice is also sometimes annoying.
@StephenKitt I had an account on alioth once. Is that dead and gone?
 
@FaheemMitha yes
 
So anyone can create an account on salsa.debian.org/users/sign_in#register-pane?
 
12:48 PM
@FaheemMitha yes
 
@StephenKitt Ok, thank you. And is it customary to tag the PR with the Debian bug number?
And if so, would the bug update automatically?
 
@FaheemMitha yes, write your commit message as usual, and add “Closes: #NNNNNN” at the end (along with your “Signed-off-by” if you want). That will mark the bug as pending when the MR is merged, if the hooks have been set up on the project.
Don’t include the bug number in the commit title though.
 
@StephenKitt The commit title would be the first line?
@StephenKitt I don't know what the Signed-off-by thing is. What is that for?
 
@FaheemMitha yes; in git commit messages, the first line is the title, followed by a blank line, then the text of the commit message
 
@StephenKitt Ok, noted.
 
1:00 PM
@FaheemMitha some projects require it, so many git users just include it by default (git commit -s does it for you)
 
@StephenKitt Ok. Thank you.
 
The Developer Certificate of Origin (DCO) was introduced in 2004 by the Linux Foundation, to enhance the submission process for software used in the Linux kernel, shortly after the SCO–Linux disputes.DCOs are often used as an alternative to a Contributor License Agreement (CLA). Instead a signed legal contract, a DCO is an affirmation that the source code being submitted originated from the developer, or that the developer has permission to submit the code. Proponents of the DCO contend that it reduces the barriers of entry introduced by a CLA. Developer Certificate of Origin Version 1.1 Copyright...
the above is what underlies “Signed-off-by” on the Linux kernel, for example
 
@StephenKitt That sounds like something that primarily applies to DDs or DMs.
Presumably a circle of trust thing.
 
@FaheemMitha no, for a project which requires it, it applies to all contributors
 
@StephenKitt Oh.
I guess the question is whether Debian requires it.
 
1:16 PM
@FaheemMitha Debian doesn’t require it.
 
@StephenKitt Ok.
 
1:33 PM
Funny, the maintainer just removed old versioning on the libyaml build depend.
 

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