On Sat, Dec 20, 2008 at 06:19:26PM +0100, Raphael Hertzog wrote: > I would like to propose something new that would partially supersede > the work done by the MIA team and that would also generate new > information somehow related to the topic of WNPP.
Well, I like the principle (who having a feeling of QA problems in Debian wouldn't?) but I don't think the mechanism you are proposing would work at all. - the first time you'll ask people to fill the forms the mechanism will suck up a lot of time to everybody. As the benefits for the filler are not clear (at least not yet) they wouldn't be motivated to spend the required time - the "fear" of getting bothered/pinged periodically via mail is something which is real among maintainers (remember all the fuss about DDPO via email? I think the fuss was inappropriate, but still it was there). This is another ingredient which will contribute "bad marketing" to such an initiative. Unfortunately, I have the feeling that your proposal will work properly only if an amount of people close to everybody will take part in it, otherwise it won't be that useful, because most likely only the active people will take part in it. Alternative proposal -------------------- If the goal is cleaning up the maintainer/uploaders field I've an alternative proposal which is, IMO of course, more likely to work properly and do not require active work from the single maintainer. It boils down to automatically filling the Uploaders field on the basis of debian/changelog. (The idea is shamelessly copied from the GNOME team.) That would be an inherent, always up to date wrt contributions measure of who worked on a given package recently. The outcome wouldn't be as fine-grained as yours (passive / backup / ...), but it would be automated. What it would be needed (warning: braindump ahead) is: - implementing it in some low-level tool, because we can't rely on CDBS class, it should (if agreed upon via something like a DEP) be fully automatica - decide the thresholds for being listed in Uploaders Orthogonal problems ------------------- After writing the above, I realized there are two orthogonal problems. One is cleaning up Uploaders, which I believe would be addressed by the above approach. The other is identifying de facto orphaned packages. For that you can indeed ping, but it can be way easier than what you propose. Just send an email (with no web link whatsover), at most once per year, and only mentioning packages which have not been touched by the maintainer for more than 1 year. The reply can be formatted enabling the maintainer to mention which packages she still maintains. No reply = orphaned package. Actually, your proposal mentions MIA, I don't get why. A maintainer can have de facto orphaned some packages and still be active on others. Cheers. -- Stefano Zacchiroli -o- PhD in Computer Science \ PostDoc @ Univ. Paris 7 z...@{upsilon.cc,pps.jussieu.fr,debian.org} -<>- http://upsilon.cc/zack/ Dietro un grande uomo c'è ..| . |. Et ne m'en veux pas si je te tutoie sempre uno zaino ...........| ..: |.... Je dis tu à tous ceux que j'aime
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