Yes, that would mean there would be no information from gerrit. including information about unmerged reviews. In that case it is probably less than ideal :).
On Fri, Oct 21, 2016 at 3:54 PM, Strainu strainu10@gmail.com wrote:
2016-10-21 16:08 GMT+03:00 Marielle Volz mvolz@wikimedia.org:
You can add multiple e-mails both to gerrit [0] and github [1]. As long
as
the e-mail address you are making commits with is added to both accounts, you can likely use your preexisting software directly on the mirrored github repos[2]. For example, my contributions to the citoid repo, all of which were made on gerrit, are also automatically* associated with my github account [3]. You could add a throwaway email to both both gerrit
and
github and set this as your git email [4] and then your e-mail will not
be
publicly exposed anywhere.
Hi Marielle,
Thank you for your response, it was really informative. Your solution seems basically equivalent to skipping gerrit entirely, right? The big downside of that is that we can't evaluate changes that were not merged. We also can't score the commit based on parameters from the review (such as how many versions were uploaded, etc.)
Strainu
Wikitech-l mailing list Wikitech-l@lists.wikimedia.org https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/wikitech-l