>>>>> "Anthony" == Anthony Towns <a...@erisian.com.au> writes:
Anthony> Hi *, "More of a comment than a question..." >> I am disappointed when people leave bitter and disheartened. Anthony> That's still kind-of better than if they're bitter and Anthony> disheartened, but won't go away though! Yeah. I actually think a huge huge improvement in Debian in the last five years or so is that culturally we've encouraged people to analyze whether they are happy and stop if they are not. More often than I'd like they go away bitter and that's unfortunate both because it's not great for the people departing and because it tends to spread bad blood around. And when it's a sign of something where we could have fixed the problem and kept people happy, well, it makes me want to fix the problems. Anthony> But we've got lots of new problems where that doesn't work Anthony> so well: people who want to quickly develop stuff with Anthony> random libraries vs people who don't want to run "curl Anthony> http://... | sudo bash"; people who want to make big Anthony> changes to everything in the distro vs people who don't Anthony> want their packages to get broken due to the latest fad, Anthony> etc. Anthony> A few years ago, we had a plan that (IMO) would have made a Anthony> big improvement there: Anthony> https://lists.debian.org/debian-devel/2013/05/msg00131.html Anthony> https://lists.debian.org/debian-devel/2015/09/msg00340.html Anthony> https://lists.debian.org/debian-devel/2015/09/msg00404.html With respect, I don't actually think bikeshedding helps that much with the sort of situations where people want the project to choose one thing. It allows people to try things out, it allows people to have technical data for their experiments more easily. However, ultimately, they still want to get stuff into Debian. And ultimately, they don't want to have to fork huge chunks of Debian to do the stuff they want. And I don't think that it solves the real emotional issues I'm seeing more and more in the project. I have high confidence that I'm not alone in feeling hurt when things I value aren't even considered by others. Having my own little playground doesn't really make me feel much better when my needs for respect and community are not met. A sufficiently poorly received email can drive away my motivation for a day and can significantly reduce my willingness to work on some aspect of Debian. I am perhaps less thick-skinned than average, but I know it's a real issue because I hear others talking about it and because I see the same signs of disengagement I find in myself when I see others receive something that is hard to take. So, I think bikeshedding is valuable, and can help some, but I don't think it's nearly as valuable as you do. The good news is that we actually have a lot of the infrastructure you need for this. As an example, the salsa CI team has a pipeline that builds packages to run several of our quality tests against. I know many people who have independently adopted similar work flows and attached them to repositories to give something very similar to what you're talking about. Interestingly, when the bikeshedding project first came out, I found it really exciting and thought it was going to be a game changer. These days though, reprepro, mini-buildd, aptly and others are strong enough tools that when I've had something I wanted to share enough to actually make it available, the infrastructure just hasn't been a problem. I realize that it still is an issue for newcomers, and that it still is valuable, but I think that tool improvements have taken off some of the pressure. The good news of course being that we can use those tool improvements in actually deploying something. That's especially true if we're willing to be incremental. Perhaps the first version only builds for amd64 and one or two other architectures. Perhaps the first version has adequate but not great key management for release keys. Perhaps the first version uses tools other than dak and buildd that aren't quite as robust. I'm not at all sure that would be a problem. Anthony> As a result, I kind of disagree with Joerg's statement in Anthony> his platform that "As the DPL is not the lead of actual Anthony> technical development, it is not for the DPL to find Anthony> technical solutions for the challenges we face" -- I think Anthony> spending time making a huge technical improvement for the Anthony> project, like bikesheds, would be the best way to Anthony> demonstrate leadership (whether done by the DPL or not), Anthony> and honestly I'd be more impressed seeing a DPL do that Anthony> compared to a DPL spending a year's time focussed on Anthony> mediating disputes and PR. Obviously, YMMV. I agree that the DPL has a job in leading technical work. I think the DPL can work to figure out how things are getting blocked and help remove blocks. The DPL has a lot of tools to do this. The DPL can lead discussions. When something is not going to get a project wide consensus, the DPL can delegate actually making the decision. Alternatively, when it's the right thing, the DPL can ask the TC or project as a whole to vote to actually make a decision. When people are getting in the way the DPL can work to resolve problems or re-delegate so that the right set of people are working on the problem. Also, to be clear, my hope is to do better than spending a year mediating disputes. My hope is to improve the quality of dispute resolution we have by helping the people who come to the DPL for dispute resolution improve their approach to disputes. My hope is to also set up a better structure to handle dispute resolution so it's not just the DPL handling that. Anthony> Anyway, some explicit questions if that's any help: Anthony> * Debian is made up of a lot of policies, and rules; and Anthony> often has a lot of arguments and hurt feelings. Debian's Anthony> also made up of a lot of genius (and admittedly not so Anthony> genius) code and technical achievements. Usually, DPLs Anthony> seem to spend all their time dealing with policies and Anthony> conflicts, rather than technical stuff. Anthony> Do you think it makes sense to put some real effort in Anthony> moving the balance the other way? If so, how? I think it makes a lot of sense to get the DPL doing more to help unblock technical work and lead technical discussion. I think the DPL should not lead by preferring a specific solution, but rather by bringing attention to problems that need solving and helping drive the discussion and decision and work facilitation process. That said, I think conflict resolution is really important in keeping a community strong and healthy. I don't think having the DPL write code is often the best choice. I do think it's critical that the DPL understand the technology and be able to talk and think coherently about the code involved, but actually spending a year hacking doesn't make that much sense to me for the DPL. Anthony> * Do you think bikesheds are actually a bad idea, or know Anthony> of any other particular roadblocks in the way of making Anthony> bikesheds happen? If Joerg is too busy to do it, do you Anthony> have any ideas on how others could make it happen (within Anthony> Debian, not as a derivative of some sort)? If elected, Anthony> would you help remove those roadblocks? I don't think bikesheds are a critical priority. I think things that limit our workflow when contributing to the big debian are higher priorities. I'm much more interested in helping move the git source package and better workflows involving salsa projects forward, because I think they will make Debian easier to contribute to and reduce cross-team and intra-team frustrations as we do our work. I'd be happy to help bikesheds along by working with someone who wanted to drive that work and lending DPL help/delegation where needed. Would you be interested in doing a deep dive into figuring out where they are now and trying to build a plan to get from where we are to something that works? Anthony> [0] I think the idea of mandating everyone use "dh" is a Anthony> bit weird here; if we made rules like that, then everyone Anthony> would have been forced to use debhelper or debmake and we Anthony> would have had to have a big policy debate before rolling Anthony> it out, rather than "just doing it"... I think that's the Anthony> sort of setup that would have prevented "dh" ever getting Anthony> written in the first place, and I don't think it's far off Anthony> from saying it's the sort of policy that caused dh's Anthony> inventor to move on from Debian... Anthony> [1] Anthony> https://lists.debian.org/debian-dak/2018/04/msg00039.html Anthony> https://lists.debian.org/debian-dak/2018/04/msg00040.html Anthony> [2] For example, want to do a big change but are stymied Anthony> because some maintainer isn't using dh and doesn't want to Anthony> manually update their package? Fork the entire archive into Anthony> your own bikeshed and just do it. After you've fixed the Anthony> bugs, it's a lot easier to say "here's a working solution, Anthony> please consider the patches", and if there's still Anthony> opposition, a lot easier to have a useful debate on a list Anthony> or with the tech ctte about which is the best approach when Anthony> they're both implemented. And in the meantime anyone who Anthony> cares can just use the bikeshed, so they don't have to Anthony> wait.
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