On 01/12/2014 00:42, Bruno P. Kinoshita wrote: > Hello Benedikt! > I guess I'm being too cautious to commit or work on issues in other > components :)
Don't worry about it. Everything at Commons is CTR (commit-then-review). The worse thing that can happen is that you have to revert a commit. It is much better to commit 10 different fixes and have to revert a couple of them than not fixing anything at all. Mark > I'll slowly start working on [jelly] to port the changes made in Jenkins. But > first will spend more time on [text], [functor] and [lang]. > Thanks!Bruno > > From: Benedikt Ritter <brit...@apache.org> > To: Commons Developers List <dev@commons.apache.org>; Bruno P. Kinoshita > <brunodepau...@yahoo.com.br> > Sent: Sunday, November 30, 2014 4:15 PM > Subject: Re: [ALL] Do we need help? > > Hello Bruno > > 2014-11-30 0:31 GMT+01:00 Bruno P. Kinoshita <brunodepau...@yahoo.com.br>: > > Hi Thomas! > I use Jelly almost every week in Jenkins plug-ins. Talked about the forked > repo they have in the project, and even told them I could spend some hours > every week to fix the necessary issues. > Even though it is possible to use Groovy in Jenkins views too now, there are > so many existing plug-ins (that are used as basis for new plug-ins) that I > find it very hard to see jelly removed from Jenkins. > Would anyone be interested and have time to push a new release ? I could > check what needed to be done in [jelly] and either update or add new issues. > Bruno > > > You always seem to be forgetting, that you're commons committer :-) If you > feel like working on any component, just drop a mail on the ML and start work > ;-) Other people will eventually join you. > Benedikt > > > > From: Thomas Neidhart <thomas.neidh...@gmail.com> > To: Commons Developers List <dev@commons.apache.org> > Sent: Saturday, November 29, 2014 2:31 PM > Subject: Re: [ALL] Do we need help? > > On 11/29/2014 11:53 AM, Benedikt Ritter wrote: >> Hi all, >> >> currently I feel really overwhelmed by the stuff I'd like to do at commons >> and the little time I can spend for it. Here is an (incomplete) list of the >> things I'd like to work on: > > Hi Benedikt, > >> - get a new release of the build plugin out of the door for auto creating >> README.md and CONTRIBUTING.md >> - Work on [VALIDATOR] and get a new release out of the door >> - Work on [DBUTILS] and get a new release out of the door >> - Push [lang] 3.4 out of the door >> - Have a look at [compress] 2.0 >> - Backport important fixes from [collections] 4.0 to 3.x and create a last >> service update >> - work on [text] >> - help releasing [imaging] 1.0 >> - Improve docs on how to get involved at commons >> - Organize a logo contest for commons >> - ... many more > > this sounds like you set your goals too high and are frustrated that you > don't get all the things done. I guess this is a common scheme for > ambitious/passionate people. Try to set more realistic goals and finish > them before doing other / more things. Then you will get the positive > feedback of achieving something and everything will be better. > > > >> I wonder how you feel about this. I have the feeling that a lot of people >> ask us to fix stuff and release components but we don't really catch up >> with this. This will give people the feeling that we are slow or we simply >> don't care. >> Whenever I see someone posting on JIRA "can you please fix this, we need >> this in out application" and nobody is reacting, I feel tempted to jump >> right in, even if I don't know the component (which adds another entry to >> the list above). >> I don't see a way how we can improve this. My feeling is, that we need more >> committers. But then I have the comments of people I've talked to in my >> ear: "to old school", "to difficult to get involved", "to slow development >> process", "to unwelcoming community". So what do we do? Do we need help? >> >> I'm excited to hear your thoughts :-) > > yeah, this is a general problem of commons imho. There are too many > components for a too small community as most of the original committers > have long left. > > The only way out is to do what we tried a couple of months ago: move not > maintained components to dormant, and keep the others alive with the > existing people. > > Just one example: jelly is a nice thing and actually used within jenkins > as the backbone html generator. But it is re-packaged within jenkins > custom bugfixes as the last jelly release (1.0) was in 2005. > > Similar things apply for el or primitives. > > These components are long dead and there are very good alternatives > available, so they should be abandoned. Cut off the dead branches to > keep the tree alive. > > Thomas > > --------------------------------------------------------------------- > To unsubscribe, e-mail: dev-unsubscr...@commons.apache.org > For additional commands, e-mail: dev-h...@commons.apache.org > > > > > > > > --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: dev-unsubscr...@commons.apache.org For additional commands, e-mail: dev-h...@commons.apache.org