as "accepted" with the developer name. You can add comments at any time to the ticket,
even when it is closed.
-\subsubsection{Submitting patches}
-
-In order to include a patch to a ticket, you need to output it, this can be done by using the \textbf{svn diff} command which generates the differences between your local copy (modified) and the version on the OpenWrt repository (unmodified yet). Then attach the patch with a description, using the "Attach" button.
-
-Your patch must respect the following conventions :
-
-\begin{itemize}
-\item it has to work, with no side effect on other platforms, distributions, packages ...
-\item it must have a reason to be included in OpenWrt : bug fix, enhancement, feature adding/removing
-\item the patch name should be named like that : <index number>-this\_fixes\_bug\_foo\_and\_bar.patch
-\item if several, they have to be indexed with an integer number : 100-patch1, 200-patch2 ...
-\end{itemize}
-
-Your patch will be read and most likely be used as-is by the developpers if it is clean and working. If not, the patch will be accepted anyway and modified to be OpenWrt-rules compliant
-
\subsubsection{Closing a ticket}
A ticket might be closed by a developer because:
\item the problem cannot be reproduced by the developers (worksforme)
\end{itemize}
-A the same time, the reporter may want to get the ticket closed since he is not
+At the same time, the reporter may want to get the ticket closed since he is not
longer able to trigger the bug, or found it invalid by himself.
When a ticket is closed by a developer and marked as "fixed", the comment contains