If you are in sysadmin-test or have access to the publictest servers, please note those servers aren't for general purpose whatever you want to use them for servers.
You've been granted access to them to work on specific projects, if a new project comes up please file an RFR and discuss on the list before you start working on it.
-Mike
On Wed, Dec 2, 2009 at 11:29 PM, Mike McGrath mmcgrath@redhat.com wrote:
If you are in sysadmin-test or have access to the publictest servers, please note those servers aren't for general purpose whatever you want to use them for servers.
You've been granted access to them to work on specific projects, if a new project comes up please file an RFR and discuss on the list before you start working on it.
Does this applies to the software that I may want to test for different fedora related projects? I ask this question because I use pt15/16 for that often.
On Thu, 3 Dec 2009, susmit shannigrahi wrote:
On Wed, Dec 2, 2009 at 11:29 PM, Mike McGrath mmcgrath@redhat.com wrote:
If you are in sysadmin-test or have access to the publictest servers, please note those servers aren't for general purpose whatever you want to use them for servers.
You've been granted access to them to work on specific projects, if a new project comes up please file an RFR and discuss on the list before you start working on it.
Does this applies to the software that I may want to test for different fedora related projects? I ask this question because I use pt15/16 for that often.
Depends, if you're testing things for the calendaring system for example, it's expected that you'd be trying several packages out. If you suddenly install snort because you want to see about setting it up, that would need an RFR.
-Mike
infrastructure@lists.fedoraproject.org