Hello,
I currently have two KDE bugs open for a few weeks but getting no attention:
- https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1945192
- https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1947973
Three more are likely to come once I do more reproduction testing.
I do understand the Fedora KDE team is very small so might not be able to get to all bugs, and that the bugs are likely to be from the upstream anyway. But I can't really raise them on bugs.kde.org unless I am sure they *are* upstream. And I would guess this would mean checking them in another distro, but the distro should have the same latest KDE version as Fedora has.
Could anyone please advice which distro this would be? I don't really want to go building Plasma from source.
Ideally I'd want a distro with a live boot of KDE, but if that is not possible, I do have a testing machine where I can install one. But which one should it be? Arch? Gentoo? Kubuntu?
On Mon, Apr 26, 2021 at 11:11 AM Mikhail Ramendik mr@ramendik.ru wrote:
Hello,
I currently have two KDE bugs open for a few weeks but getting no attention:
Three more are likely to come once I do more reproduction testing.
I do understand the Fedora KDE team is very small so might not be able to get to all bugs, and that the bugs are likely to be from the upstream anyway. But I can't really raise them on bugs.kde.org unless I am sure they *are* upstream. And I would guess this would mean checking them in another distro, but the distro should have the same latest KDE version as Fedora has.
Could anyone please advice which distro this would be? I don't really want to go building Plasma from source.
Ideally I'd want a distro with a live boot of KDE, but if that is not possible, I do have a testing machine where I can install one. But which one should it be? Arch? Gentoo? Kubuntu?
You can and *should* absolutely just file the bugs upstream anyway. The KDE bug tracker lets you set what distro you experienced it on and where you got the KDE software from (e.g. Fedora RPMs). The advantage there is that *they* can check to see if it's an upstream or a downstream issue and verify that for you.