Trying as much as possible to consistently:
- use a present tense predicate followed by a direct object
- verb referring directly to the functionality provided
(ie. not "add command that does this" but simple "do that")
- keep simple and to the point, leaving details for the long help
(width is tight, possibly even more so for translations)
Thanks to timeless, Martin Geisler, Rafael Villar Burke, Dan Villiom
Podlaski Christiansen and others for the helpful suggestions.
During 2.17, Bugzilla ditched the old 'processmail' script. With 2.18
contrib/sendbugmail.pl arrived in its place.
For notification emails to work properly, sendbugmail.pl requires as
its second parameter the Bugzilla user who made the commit. Otherwise
the user will not be recognised as the committer, and will receive
notification emails about the commit regardless of their preference
about being notified on their own commits. This parameter should be given
to processmail also, but wasn't for historical reasons.
Add new config with the local Bugzilla install directory, and provide
defaults for the notify string which should work for most setups.
Still permit notify string to be specified, and for backwards
compatibility with any extant notify strings try first interpolating
notify string with old-style single bug ID argument. Add new 2.18
support version to introduce sendbugmail.pl.
In other words, this update should be backwards-compatible with existing
installations, but offers simplified setup in most cases. And as a bonus
Bugzilla notification emails will be dispatched correctly; notifiers will
not receive an email unless configured to do so.
Revise the comments detailing module usage at the start of the Bugzilla
extension into extension help text.
Expand the detail given on extension settings, in an attempt to permit
the user to configure successfully without having to study the extension
code. Show a sample configuration as well.
Bugzilla 3.2 changes the type of all MySQL tables it uses from MyISAM
to InnoDB. MyISAM does not support transactions, and performs an implied
commit after each update. InnoDB does support transactions, and so
exposes a bug where changes to the Bugzilla database were not committed,
and so with 3.2 are lost when the database connection closes.
old scheme (False/None/0/'' == fail) made coding style
unnatural, did not allow use of mercurial commands as hooks.
new scheme (False/None/0 == pass) is pythonic, does not require peculiar
"return True" at ends of hooks, allows hooks like this:
[hooks]
# update working dir after push into this repo
changegroup.update = python:mercurial.commands.update
hook updates bugzilla bugs when it sees commit comments that mention
bug id, such as "i fixed bug 77".
only bugzilla 2.16 supported yet, but easy to extend. bugzilla versions
have different schema, i have not used later than 2.16.