You are viewing a plain text version of this content. The canonical link for it is here.
Posted to java-dev@axis.apache.org by Manoj Khangaonkar <kh...@gmail.com> on 2007/02/02 08:42:16 UTC

[AXIS2] unresolved issues

Hi,

I was going through the AXIS2 JIRA issues trying to find something
interesting to work on / fix and I notice
that in the last few days about 75% of open issues got assigned to 3
individuals - 111 issues , 91 issues and 41 issues.

I thought if an issue is assigned to someone , it implied that someone
is working on it and that a fix might be
coming in soon.

What is the protocol that is followed ? --- Does assigned mean "don'nt waste
your time" - some one else has
figured this out.

Or is it just a placeholder for the person who will commit the patch when
available.

Mj

Re: [AXIS2] unresolved issues

Posted by Manoj Khangaonkar <kh...@gmail.com>.
Dims, Glen

Thanks for clarifying.

Mj


On 2/2/07, Glen Daniels <gl...@thoughtcraft.com> wrote:
>
> +1, though it is a generally good idea, especially when the assignee is
> actually set on an issue, to comment and let people know you're starting
> work - that can avoid duplication of effort just in case they've already
> started on it too.
>
> --Glen
>
> Davanum Srinivas wrote:
> > Manoj,
> >
> > Please pick up *any* issue you want to work on :) We basically mean,
> > "please take a look at this when you get a chance".
> >
> > thanks,
> > dims
> >
> > On 2/2/07, Manoj Khangaonkar <kh...@gmail.com> wrote:
> >> Hi,
> >>
> >> I was going through the AXIS2 JIRA issues trying to find something
> >> interesting to work on / fix and I notice
> >> that in the last few days about 75% of open issues got assigned to 3
> >> individuals - 111 issues , 91 issues and 41 issues.
> >>
> >> I thought if an issue is assigned to someone , it implied that someone
> is
> >> working on it and that a fix might be
> >> coming in soon.
> >>
> >> What is the protocol that is followed ? --- Does assigned mean "don'nt
> >> waste
> >> your time" - some one else has
> >> figured this out.
> >>
> >> Or is it just a placeholder for the person who will commit the patch
> when
> >> available.
> >>
> >> Mj
> >
> >
>
> ---------------------------------------------------------------------
> To unsubscribe, e-mail: axis-dev-unsubscribe@ws.apache.org
> For additional commands, e-mail: axis-dev-help@ws.apache.org
>
>

Re: [AXIS2] unresolved issues

Posted by Glen Daniels <gl...@thoughtcraft.com>.
+1, though it is a generally good idea, especially when the assignee is 
actually set on an issue, to comment and let people know you're starting 
work - that can avoid duplication of effort just in case they've already 
started on it too.

--Glen

Davanum Srinivas wrote:
> Manoj,
> 
> Please pick up *any* issue you want to work on :) We basically mean,
> "please take a look at this when you get a chance".
> 
> thanks,
> dims
> 
> On 2/2/07, Manoj Khangaonkar <kh...@gmail.com> wrote:
>> Hi,
>>
>> I was going through the AXIS2 JIRA issues trying to find something
>> interesting to work on / fix and I notice
>> that in the last few days about 75% of open issues got assigned to 3
>> individuals - 111 issues , 91 issues and 41 issues.
>>
>> I thought if an issue is assigned to someone , it implied that someone is
>> working on it and that a fix might be
>> coming in soon.
>>
>> What is the protocol that is followed ? --- Does assigned mean "don'nt 
>> waste
>> your time" - some one else has
>> figured this out.
>>
>> Or is it just a placeholder for the person who will commit the patch when
>> available.
>>
>> Mj
> 
> 

---------------------------------------------------------------------
To unsubscribe, e-mail: axis-dev-unsubscribe@ws.apache.org
For additional commands, e-mail: axis-dev-help@ws.apache.org


Re: [AXIS2] unresolved issues

Posted by Davanum Srinivas <da...@gmail.com>.
Manoj,

Please pick up *any* issue you want to work on :) We basically mean,
"please take a look at this when you get a chance".

thanks,
dims

On 2/2/07, Manoj Khangaonkar <kh...@gmail.com> wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I was going through the AXIS2 JIRA issues trying to find something
> interesting to work on / fix and I notice
> that in the last few days about 75% of open issues got assigned to 3
> individuals - 111 issues , 91 issues and 41 issues.
>
> I thought if an issue is assigned to someone , it implied that someone is
> working on it and that a fix might be
> coming in soon.
>
> What is the protocol that is followed ? --- Does assigned mean "don'nt waste
> your time" - some one else has
> figured this out.
>
> Or is it just a placeholder for the person who will commit the patch when
> available.
>
> Mj


-- 
Davanum Srinivas :: http://wso2.org/ :: Oxygen for Web Services Developers

---------------------------------------------------------------------
To unsubscribe, e-mail: axis-dev-unsubscribe@ws.apache.org
For additional commands, e-mail: axis-dev-help@ws.apache.org