Attila Lendvai schreef op di 03-05-2022 om 17:00 [+0000]: > a possible scenario: a large import can take several minutes. > if there's a transient network error, then this way it may finish > with 99% of the packages, and the rest can be restarted by hand after > inspecting the log output. Catching (presumably) transient network errors and reporting them with 'report-network-error' and the like: no problem. > another scenario is that the importer is simply buggy, ... but if there's some kind of bug, why not just report and fix it? > and the user gets 99% of the packages imported, and has to do only > one package by hand. If the bug is fixed, then no packages need to be done by hand and other people will benefit as well. Whereas if it's only for 1% and the backtrace only happens for recursive import and not for non-recursive or manual import, then I'd think that the chance that the user actually reports or fixes the bug decreases a lot. Greetings, Maxime.