1 # Experimental Tag Sharing / Pseudo-Bug-Tracking for/with notmuch
5 There is a dump of (some views of) the nmbug [[status|http://nmbug.tethera.net/status]].
9 1. Install and use notmuch version notmuch 0.9+63~gebd1adc or newer and
10 perl module `Pod::Usage` (packaged as `perl-doc` in debian).
12 The nmbug script is available in `contrib/nmbug`.
14 2. The current tag repo can be obtained by:
16 `$ git clone --bare http://nmbug.tethera.net/git/nmbug-tags.git $HOME/.nmbug`
18 Check that your git is recent enough by entering:
20 `$ git --git-dir=$HOME/.nmbug fetch`
22 If you get failures then you need to update your git (as well).
24 ## Using nmbug, simple example
26 # get the latest version of the tags
29 # do some tagging; see below for conventions
30 $ notmuch tag +notmuch::patch $id
32 # write the tag changes from the notmuch database
35 ## Using nmbug, doing the same thing with more steps
37 # get the latest version of the tags
40 # Optionally inspect the fetched changes
46 # merge the fetched tags into notmuch
49 # observe status is clear now,
52 # make the tag changes
53 $ notmuch tag +notmuch::patch id
55 # double check your changes
59 # write the tag changes
64 For the moment, we are using a central repo, hosted at:
66 nmbug@nmbug.tethera.net:nmbug-tags
68 To get push access, send your public key (ideally in a gpg signed
69 email) to David Bremner. There is a convenience command:
73 But you will have to change your url with:
75 $ git --git-dir=$HOME/.nmbug remote set-url origin nmbug@nmbug.tethera.net:nmbug-tags
77 ## Tagging conventions
79 _Note that the tag database is probably catching up to these
82 ### Main patch tracking tags
84 Initially any patch should be tagged:
88 Patches that are for discussion, rather than proposed for master
89 should also be tagged:
91 notmuch::wip is "work in progress", posted for review or comment.
93 Most patches will be initially tagged:
95 notmuch::needs-review needs some (more) review
97 unless they are tagged:
99 notmuch::trivial looks harmless
101 Patches keep `notmuch::needs-review` until they either get enough
102 reviews, or one of the following resolutions is reached:
104 notmuch::obsolete replaced by some other patch
105 notmuch::pushed is pushed to master
106 notmuch::wontfix for whatever reason, this patch will not
109 Sometimes the process stalls, and patches get tagged:
111 notmuch::moreinfo waiting for feedback from patch proposer
113 notmuch::stale The patch no longer applies to master (or in
114 rare cases, to release)
116 Note that these tags typically apply to whole series of patches; it
117 doesn't usually make sense to apply patches later in the series before
118 earlier ones. So a patch may be tagged `moreinfo` or `stale` only
119 because a predecessor patch is.
123 So far we are just tagging certain messages as bug reports, meaning
124 things that "everyone" agrees should be fixed.
126 notmuch::bug is a bug report
127 notmuch::fixed indicates that the bug is fixed in the
132 These patches are more comments and suggestions.
134 notmuch::doc is a documentation patch
135 notmuch::emacs is a patch/bug for the emacs UI
136 notmuch::feature provides a new feature
137 notmuch::fix fixes a bug
138 notmuch::portability improves portability
139 notmuch::review is a review
140 notmuch::test provides a new test/or improves testing
141 notmuch::$n this patch should be considered for
144 ## Tracking the patch queue
146 I (David Bremner) use the following search (in my case as a saved
149 tag:notmuch::patch and not tag:notmuch::pushed and \
150 not tag:notmuch::obsolete and not tag:notmuch::wip \
151 and not tag:notmuch::moreinfo and not tag:notmuch::contrib
153 You might or might not want as many exclusions. Another interesting
156 tag:notmuch::reviewed and not tag:notmuch::pushed
158 See the [[status|http://nmbug.tethera.net/status]] page for more
165 The tags are stored in a bare-repo, which means they are not obviously
166 visible. There is an `nmbug archive` command analogous to `git
167 archive` Tags are represented as empty files in the tree; if you extra
168 them, the tree looks something like:
170 tags/878waiwi0f.wl%25james@hackervisions.org/
171 tags/878waiwi0f.wl%25james@hackervisions.org/emacs
172 tags/878waiwi0f.wl%25james@hackervisions.org/patch
173 tags/87aa8j7hqu.fsf@zancas.localnet/
174 tags/87aa8j7hqu.fsf@zancas.localnet/patch
175 tags/87aa8j7hqu.fsf@zancas.localnet/pushed
177 The `%25` represents hex code for a character that cannot be used directly
178 (in this case %, only because it is needed as an escape).
182 - Currently the parser of nmbug (like that of notmuch restore) assumes
183 that there are no spaces in message-ids.