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 Fidêncio wrote: >>> On Tue, Sep 24, 2019 at 8:24 PM Jim Perrin <jperrin at 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 One of the main complaints from libosinfo consumers is how outdated 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). -- Jim Perrin The CentOS Project | http://www.centos.org twitter: @BitIntegrity | GPG Key: FA09AD77