Hi Emacs developers! I maintain `rst.el`. For some years now `rst.el` is also contained in Emacs (at `lisp/textmodes/rst.el`). However, for various reasons I were not able to maintain it in the Emacs repository. This has now changed :-) . With the help of Stefan Monnier I am now an Emacs developer. I consider it an honor to be allowed to contribute to one of the oldest Free Software projects which at the same time is my standard tool for so many tasks :-) . Having this said I need to add that my involvement here will quite likely focus on maintaining `rst.el`. I work on it once in a while and meanwhile it is really useful. I will continue to maintain `rst.el` in the Docutils project and I guess most feedback comes from there. Well, "meanwhile" also means that I worked a lot on `rst.el` compared to the version still in the Emacs repository. During the last few days I merged the changes to `rst.el` into my development version so these changes are already integrated. Well, how to bring this large "patch" into the Emacs repository? Usually in Free Software projects it's a best practice to submit small patches. In this case this really makes no sense - the diff consists of 288 hunks. May I commit simply the current version to Bazaar or is there a better way? Also a review of the current version by you may make sense. According to the GNU Coding Standards I need to write a ChangeLog entry. I don't see this makes much sense for such a large patch - at least not in the way ChangeLog entries are done according to the GNU Coding Standards. So how to construct a ChangeLog entry which complies with the standards but makes sense? My work at rst.el also resulted in some new features. Where to put a description of these features? I think this will be most interesting for a new version of Emacs. I also wrote a number of unit tests for some aspects of `rst.el` (nearly 6000 LOC) using the great `ert` framework. I looked around a bit in the Emacs repository and discovered the `test` directory. Would this be the right place to put my tests to? If so are there established practices for such a case? If not I'd create a directory `rst` there and put stuff there. Since my tests need a buffer to operate on I also wrote some support code for ert to allow tests on buffer contents. I didn't follow the development of ert - may be something like this exists meanwhile. If not this may be useful for others, too. Finally a general question: On which mailing lists I am supposed to subscribe as an Emacs developer? I just subscribed `emacs-devel` and `bug-gnu-emacs`. Do I need to subscribe to `help-gnu-emacs` also? Any others? Grüße Stefan