- From: Tobie Langel <tobie@fb.com>
- Date: Wed, 28 Nov 2012 09:09:48 +0000
- To: James Graham <jgraham@opera.com>, Rebecca Hauck <rhauck@adobe.com>
- CC: "kjellander@google.com" <kjellander@google.com>, "phoglund@google.com" <phoglund@google.com>, Tobie Langel <tobie.langel@gmail.com>, "krisk@microsoft.com" <krisk@microsoft.com>, "odinho@opera.com" <odinho@opera.com>, "<public-test-infra@w3.org>" <public-test-infra@w3.org>
On 11/28/12 10:01 AM, "James Graham" <jgraham@opera.com> wrote: >On 11/28/2012 12:31 AM, Rebecca Hauck wrote: >> Hi all, >> >> I'm providing support for some of the TestTWF attendees getting the >> tests they wrote that day into the proper repositories. I'm well >> familiar with how it's done in the CSS world, but am not sure of similar >> processes for other repositories. >> >> For HTML5, I found this: >> >> http://www.w3.org/html/wg/wiki/Testing/Submission/ >> >> Is mailing the public-html-testsuite list really an acceptable way to >> submit them? > >Well it's an acceptable way to announce your submission at least. > >> Ideally, we'd like it if people get set up with mercurial to push >> themselves, so I'd like to direct their attention the those instruction >> near the bottom of the page. Do they have to request write access to do >> this? (we do for CSS). > >I think for HTML and WebApps you have to be a group member to have push >access. But I am not 100% sure. Added public-test-infra to the CC so >that Mike Smith can tell me that I'm talking nonsense. > >> Same questions for IndexedDB & WebRTCŠ or any of the repos listed here: >> http://dvcs.w3.org/hg/ Wouldn't it be easier if all W3C tests were on Github? </troll> --tobie
Received on Wednesday, 28 November 2012 09:11:05 UTC