> Speaking for myself, as a volunteer here, I do what I can, when I can, with > a eye toward using my time wisely while balancing many other > responsibilities. > Commons has over 20 components, some I use at work, some I used at play, > some I do not use. > I do my best to pick low hanging fruits, fix bugs that could be > troublesome, and implement new features I feel would clearly benefit a > component's community, or that I simply need. > All of this takes time; thow in this mailing list, JIRAs, PRs from GitHub, > and that's a lot to chew on. IOW, be patient, manage your expectations ;-) I never doubt this. I know you are busy and put a lot of effort on commons. And your helps/suggestions are actually really helpful in most of the times. Thank you. I'm just, kind of curious about how things works here normally. Thanks.
Gary Gregory <garydgreg...@gmail.com> 于2020年6月12日周五 下午9:56写道: > On Fri, Jun 12, 2020 at 9:44 AM Xeno Amess <xenoam...@gmail.com> wrote: > > > >> 8. What should we do when we have a pr delayed for a long time? And > how > > >> long is thought to be an unusual long time for waiting? 3 days.1 > week,or > > 1 > > >> month? > > > > > They might have been forgotten, or there may other issues. > > > Examples? > > > > for 1 year example: > > https://github.com/apache/commons-lang/pull/428 > > for half year example: > > https://github.com/apache/commons-vfs/pull/78 > > (I have no idea whether it is already resolved, as I have not received > any > > report about it being resolved, and the pr is still not closed or marked > > resolved by someone.) > > for two weeks example: > > too many. > > As I said above, I have no better way for detecting whether a repo is > > "active", so I send some "trying minor prs" to every repo (nearly). > > Most of them have no response. > > No approving, no rejection, no modification suggestions. > > If you really wanna details, I will try to make a list for you. > > > > Speaking for myself, as a volunteer here, I do what I can, when I can, with > a eye toward using my time wisely while balancing many other > responsibilities. > Commons has over 20 components, some I use at work, some I used at play, > some I do not use. > I do my best to pick low hanging fruits, fix bugs that could be > troublesome, and implement new features I feel would clearly benefit a > component's community, or that I simply need. > All of this takes time; thow in this mailing list, JIRAs, PRs from GitHub, > and that's a lot to chew on. IOW, be patient, manage your expectations ;-) > > HTH, > Gary > > > > > > > > Xeno Amess <xenoam...@gmail.com> 于2020年6月12日周五 下午9:36写道: > > > > > >> Are they under a same (or at least > > > >> similar) management mechanism? Or just sharing a common prefix? > > > > > > > Do you mean the development tools (maven, git)? > > > > There some measure of "standardization" through the parent POM > > > > file, but nothing is really enforced. The code style depends on the > > > > regular contributors (and how old the codebase was when it was > > > > considered "mature"). > > > > > > So...if we treat a repo as a city, there should be some regular > > > contributors like Mayor or something, and PMCs are more like Special > > Envoy > > > from the King, correct? > > > And in usual cases the "some regular contributors" are people who > review > > > prs. > > > But what will happen if the "some regular contributors" all become busy > > > and nobody be willing to review? > > > Is there a mechanism for this situation? > > > > > > Xeno Amess <xenoam...@gmail.com> 于2020年6月12日周五 下午9:29写道: > > > > > >> Hi. > > >> > > >> >> 2. How are commons projects related? > > >> > > >> > They are not necessarily related. Usually it is considered > > >> > a feature if a component has zero dependency (as it is was > > >> > easier to avoid "JAR hell"). > > >> > However, there are also drawbacks, e.g. duplicating functionality > > >> > (and work) needed by several components. > > >> > > >> Something was not quite right about this. > > >> For example, in commons-vfs, we just use commons-lang3 as a > dependency. > > >> But in commons-email, we fork some of utility functions in > commons-lang3 > > >> as a java class in commons-email. > > >> Which is the right way, or a more commonly accepted way in commons > > >> projects? > > >> > > >> > > >> Gilles Sadowski <gillese...@gmail.com> 于2020年6月12日周五 下午9:07写道: > > >> > > >>> Hello. > > >>> > > >>> Le ven. 12 juin 2020 à 13:51, Xeno Amess <xenoam...@gmail.com> a > > écrit : > > >>> > > > >>> > 1. How can a project *** becomes commons-***, or how did a > > commons-*** > > >>> > project started? What is the actual procedural? > > >>> > > >>> For new components, this list would be the place to make the > > >>> proposal. A discussion would decide if "Apache Commons" is > > >>> the right place (given the interest/capacity of the current team). > > >>> > > >>> > 2. How are commons projects related? > > >>> > > >>> They are not necessarily related. Usually it is considered > > >>> a feature if a component has zero dependency (as it is was > > >>> easier to avoid "JAR hell"). > > >>> However, there are also drawbacks, e.g. duplicating functionality > > >>> (and work) needed by several components. > > >>> > > >>> > Are they under a same (or at least > > >>> > similar) management mechanism? Or just sharing a common prefix? > > >>> > > >>> Do you mean the development tools (maven, git)? > > >>> There some measure of "standardization" through the parent POM > > >>> file, but nothing is really enforced. The code style depends on the > > >>> regular contributors (and how old the codebase was when it was > > >>> considered "mature"). > > >>> > > >>> > 3. How is commons projects' version control, based on function or > > >>> based on > > >>> > time? > > >>> > > >>> A backward-compatible release has its minor version number > > >>> increased; otherwise both the major number and the base package > > >>> are changed. > > >>> > > >>> > 4. Why some projects are on svn, some on gitbox, and some on > github? > > >>> > > >>> All actively developed components were (will be) moved to "gitbox" > > >>> (decision made a few years ago, cf. "dev" M archive). > > >>> Those remaining on SVN are probably mainly "dormant" (except > > >>> perhaps for some security fix). > > >>> > > >>> IIUC, a "GitHub" mirror is automatically created for every new > > >>> "gitbox" Apache project. > > >>> > > >>> > 5. What problems shall be put on mailing list, and what problems > > shall > > >>> be > > >>> > put on Jira? > > >>> > > >>> ML: proposal, discussion on design, ... > > >>> JIRA: identified bugs (with references and/or unit test), accepted > > >>> feature, discussion on implementation details, ... > > >>> > > >>> > 6. Is there quite some dead projects in commons? And how to > > detect/mark > > >>> > them? > > >>> > > >>> Depends on the definition of "dead". > > >>> None of the components in "proper" are considered dead, even if > > >>> they are not actively developed anymore (whether this is "good" > > >>> or "bad" is another question). > > >>> I haven't seen anything in "sandbox" being developed for a long > > >>> time (until the last few days where "Commons Graph" seems it > > >>> may be revived). > > >>> Unless I'm mistaken, a project in "dormant" has been subject to > > >>> decision for stopping its development. > > >>> > > >>> > 7. What is the general waiting time for a pr to be reviewed(and > > >>> rejected or > > >>> > accepted)? In my own observation the waiting time is between [1 > days, > > >>> 1.5 > > >>> > years) , is it a little...large? > > >>> > > >>> It boils down to the level of involvement of a committer for the > > >>> component being the target of the PR. > > >>> Developers being volunteers, it certainly also depends on the > > >>> balance between the usefulness of the PR and the work required > > >>> from the reviewer. > > >>> > > >>> > 8. What should we do when we have a pr delayed for a long time? And > > how > > >>> > long is thought to be an unusual long time for waiting? 3 days.1 > > >>> week,or 1 > > >>> > month? > > >>> > > >>> They might have been forgotten, or there may other issues. > > >>> Examples? > > >>> > > >>> > > > >>> > Sorry for having so many questions, but I'm just very curious. > > >>> > > >>> Hope the above answers have helped. > > >>> > > >>> Regards, > > >>> Gilles > > >>> > > >>> --------------------------------------------------------------------- > > >>> To unsubscribe, e-mail: dev-unsubscr...@commons.apache.org > > >>> For additional commands, e-mail: dev-h...@commons.apache.org > > >>> > > >>> > > >