- May 7, 2002
- 10,371
- 762
- 126
Here is the story, there was a issue with some code, and the issue was fixed, removed over 800 lines of useless code that we would never use, and then said patch was put on a tracker for further comments on.
Another person comes along and knowing the patch was on the tracker still proceeded to 'update' the old library.
His push did NOT fix the issue at all, nor did it do anything except update said library to newest version and some docs.
I feel that, since they very well knew about the patch on the tracker, and yet still proceeded to update said code with trivial updates, that they shouldn't be allowed to have commit privilege anymore.
This person isn't even a programmer at all, they had access for unrelated things that have nothing to do with the overall code base, just a few maintenance tasks.
Haven't gotten a explanation for the commit yet, but this is a pretty silly thing to do.
So, I am curious, how many people would yank their commit privs, and instead force them to submit patches to the tracker instead ?
Another person comes along and knowing the patch was on the tracker still proceeded to 'update' the old library.
His push did NOT fix the issue at all, nor did it do anything except update said library to newest version and some docs.
I feel that, since they very well knew about the patch on the tracker, and yet still proceeded to update said code with trivial updates, that they shouldn't be allowed to have commit privilege anymore.
This person isn't even a programmer at all, they had access for unrelated things that have nothing to do with the overall code base, just a few maintenance tasks.
Haven't gotten a explanation for the commit yet, but this is a pretty silly thing to do.
So, I am curious, how many people would yank their commit privs, and instead force them to submit patches to the tracker instead ?
