X-Git-Url: https://git.cworth.org/git?a=blobdiff_plain;f=nmbug.mdwn;h=8f712d6d00d62d2908a90a2ad1606178cf7f649d;hb=ad04c8c6b3d8c29a905d9f5f92256fc2bd64be5e;hp=6431ee9c68397c5c515bba43af5aec633687cac7;hpb=eebc9595c7eaeadf2a5a23bbd4c5990c37bce2b0;p=obsolete%2Fnotmuch-wiki diff --git a/nmbug.mdwn b/nmbug.mdwn index 6431ee9..8f712d6 100644 --- a/nmbug.mdwn +++ b/nmbug.mdwn @@ -6,20 +6,16 @@ There is a dump of (some views of) the nmbug [[status|http://nmbug.tethera.net/s ## Getting started -1. Install and use notmuch version notmuch 0.9+63~gebd1adc or newer and +1. Install and use notmuch version **0.10** or newer and perl module `Pod::Usage` (packaged as `perl-doc` in debian). The nmbug script is available in `contrib/nmbug`. -2. The current tag repo can be obtained by: +2. Make sure your `git version` is **1.7.4** or newer. - `$ git clone --bare http://nmbug.tethera.net/git/nmbug-tags.git $HOME/.nmbug` - - Check that your git is recent enough by entering: - - `$ git --git-dir=$HOME/.nmbug fetch` +3. Enter the following command to obtain the current tag repository: - If you get failures then you need to update your git (as well). + `$ git clone --bare http://nmbug.tethera.net/git/nmbug-tags.git $HOME/.nmbug` ## Using nmbug, simple example @@ -112,6 +108,12 @@ Sometimes the process stalls, and patches get tagged: or others notmuch::stale The patch no longer applies to master (or in rare cases, to release) + +Note that these tags typically apply to whole series of patches; it +doesn't usually make sense to apply patches later in the series before +earlier ones. So a patch may be tagged `moreinfo` or `stale` only +because a predecessor patch is. + ### Bug tracking tag So far we are just tagging certain messages as bug reports, meaning @@ -158,8 +160,8 @@ example searches. The tags are stored in a bare-repo, which means they are not obviously visible. There is an `nmbug archive` command analogous to `git -archive` Tags are represented as empty files in the tree; if you extra -them, the tree looks something like: +archive` Tags are represented as empty files in the tree; if you +extract them, the tree looks something like: tags/878waiwi0f.wl%25james@hackervisions.org/ tags/878waiwi0f.wl%25james@hackervisions.org/emacs