> ----- Ursprüngliche Nachricht -----
> Von: Adam Barth
> Gesendet: 09.04.10 23:26 Uhr
> An: [email protected]
> Betreff: [webkit-dev] Archiving the Haiku port? (was WebKit2 and all that 
> jazz)
> 
> Is the Haiku port actively maintained?
> 
> http://trac.webkit.org/browser/trunk/WebKit/haiku/
> 
> Looking at the ChangeLog, I don't see any real activity:
> 
> http://trac.webkit.org/browser/trunk/WebKit/haiku/ChangeLog
> 
> Maybe we should archive it? I certainly don't want to exclude Haiku
> from the community. Ideally, we'd make it easy to unarchive it if
> folks appear who want to work on it again.

I am actively working on the Haiku port. I have submitted a number of patches, 
but since the review process takes _very_ long (no offense intended) I am 
careful to only submit patches when I don't anticipate changes to the files in 
the near future. A few of my patches still just sit there in bugzilla. Some got 
reviewed, the last activity was on a patch to ImageBufferHaiku.cpp, where the 
reviewer gave an r- because I removed the original copyright. Myself and Maxime 
Simone (original copyright holder) explained the issue and why it was correct 
to remove it. However, no response from the reviewer since then.

I have a *huge* number of additional patches, since I am writing a WebKit 
browser for Haiku, completing the port, the Haiku WebKit API and the browser. 
Many of the patches would simply not be small, and to be frank, the review 
process has so far discouraged me from even trying to submit any of the bigger 
stuff. Especially the stuff I am working on all the time.

I can certainly prepare updated patches and new patches in the next days, but 
it takes careful preparation and if those patches just sit there in bugzilla 
and receive no further feedback after initial review... it is just not 
motivating if the initial review came after about 10 days in the first place.

The problem is of course that there are no dedicated Haiku reviewers. Other 
ports have their own number of reviewers and people interested in getting 
patches for their ports landed. With Haiku it's a chicken and egg problem. As 
long as I don't get a significant amount of patches landed, I won't even become 
committer.

I don't really know what a solution could be. The Haiku port touches no other 
code, it's pretty self-contained. In that respect the chances are very low to 
affect other ports/people. I don't know if that could be an argument for just 
rubber stamping a lot of patches until the Haiku code in the official repo 
includes most of my stuff. What do you guys think? IMHO, the problem with the 
Haiku port is certainly not that it is not actively maintained, I work many 
hours on it each day, the problem is how to get the patches into SVN smoothly.

Best regards,
-Stephan
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