On Feb 2, 2008 2:48 PM, Leo Simons <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > On Feb 2, 2008, at 1:20 AM, David Reiss wrote: > > J Aaron Farr wrote: > >> git could be an issue. > > > > Can you explain what the issue is with Git? > > Probably not very well :-). Basically, we know how to do the apache- > style open source process using centralized version control, we don't > quite know how to do it using (significantly) different version > control models. > > That can (will?) change, but it probably can't change very quickly. > > > Let me say in closing, though, that I don't want this issue to hold > > up the vote on Thrift. > > I think it's a good idea to treat it as a seperate topic. > > > I think that everyone involved with the project thinks that Apache > > is the best place for it, and if the PMC says we have to use > > Subversion, we will. > > Cool. > > 1. You have to use subversion. >
Why? Has been a vote done? where? I vote +1 for git if a vote is still open. > 2. You are cordially invited to engage within apache to see what we > can do about modifying rule #1. > Can you elaborate on what "engage within apache" means in this context? I have been "engaged within apache" for almost 8 years now, including membership and being an officer for some time, and yet I don't understand what "engage with apache" means. I don't even hope new people will. > For #2, I can immediately imagine some ways to use git-svn that are > quite acceptable. I can also imagine some things that are probably > not so easily acceptable. I can imagine a BoF session at the next > ApacheCon about it :-) > This effectively means: you can use whatever you want, provided that it is subversion. But what concerns me most is that the Foundation is effectively turning into a bureaucracy, where norms appear out of nowhere without any justification. I see no mention to community reasons here, and any resource based reasons have tiny justification, specially when those are not even stated. Infrastructure used to be a support for the projects, not the other way around. While I understand some of the practical reasons stated in this thread, I don't understand the "legalist" note on it, neither the normative answers ("who makes those norms"?). The ASF used to be a loose community of projects, at least technically and codewise, and I think what SCM is used is a very important technical decision for project and community. BTW, I'm copying [EMAIL PROTECTED], in an effort to keep a mostly dead list going. Regards, Santiago > > cheers, > > > - Leo, fan (but not active user) of git > > > > --------------------------------------------------------------------- > To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] > For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] > > --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]