On 9/24/19 1:31 PM, Phil Wyett wrote:
On Tue, 2019-09-24 at 13:25 -0700, Jim Perrin wrote:
On 9/24/19 11:50 AM, Fabiano FidĂȘncio wrote:
On Tue, Sep 24, 2019 at 8:24 PM Jim Perrin jperrin@centos.org wrote:
Okay, now that the release is out, and everything is announced properly. I'm happy to answer questions about Stream.
Does the Stream change the way to contributing to a specific package on CentOS?
"It depends". It's a snarky answer, but it's true.
One of the main complaints from libosinfo consumers is how outdated the library is when CentOS is released (we have upstream releases of our database monthly). What would be the best way to get our library always up-to-date taking advantage of Streams?
We have to realize that stream is intended to target the next RHEL release, so if you didn't see packages being rapidly rebased before, you probably shouldn't expect that to change. If it's a simple fix, a feature addition that you've backported, that sort of thing, then the vision would be a pull request and discussion, with the goal of having that merged in.
Where will primary discussion and submissions related to streams take place? WIl the primary be the CentOS bug tracker or Red Hat bugzilla?
The discussion will be here on the -devel mailing list. We're currently using the CentOS bug tracker, but we have been exploring the idea of using either RH's bugzilla, or Jira (don't make that face).