On Fri, 2004-03-19 at 17:01, William Hooper wrote: > Rodolfo J. Paiz said: > > At 14:38 3/19/2004, you wrote: > >>On Thu, 2004-03-18 at 23:45, Rodolfo J. Paiz wrote: > >> > what can I, or someone like me, do to help test something > >> > like this so it moves from "testing" to "released" more quickly? > >> > >>Your installation of the testing package will not speed up the release > >>[...] if something isn't working the way you expect it to read bugzilla > >>to see if others are having the problem too, if not file a bug. > >> > >>[...] Did I get all that out okay? > > I don't agree, Christopher. Specifically: > http://www.redhat.com/archives/fedora-list/2004-March/msg03909.html > "...test, add your results to the bug report, and we can get this pushed > to live quickly." For a package like SSL most average users (including me) will not be able to stress test the package to find the lower bugs. Realistically SSH'ing from one box to another probably will not discover the bugs that _were_ in the previous packages. But by all means I encourage everyone to help and test as much software as possible! To begin as a tester though you may want to start at a higher level - testing GUI's and the like. I think that is the best way to start. Find widgets that are not connected to proper handlers and discover poor HCI (I love HCI) designs. That's where I feel Linux/GNU falls the lowest (unlike apple), but things are getting better! I hope I don't sound too elitist here, it's just the way it is. There is a sharp learning curve that I'm still climbing, even after 4 years. > > Yes, as far as what's good for *me*. The question has another side: what > > can someone like me to do to help test the code (say, on a spare system)? > > Or does the low level of knowledge preclude any help in this area? I'm > > looking for ways in which people (many people, not just me) can help the > > community in this process. Chris -- Software Engineering IV, McMaster University PGP Public Key: http://nesser.org/pgp-key/ 21:13:04 up 33 min, 2 users, load average: 0.46, 0.32, 0.32 Please avoid sending me Word or PowerPoint attachments. See http://www.fsf.org/philosophy/no-word-attachments.html
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