Hi. 2020-06-12 15:44 UTC+02:00, Xeno Amess <xenoam...@gmail.com>: >>> 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.)
I can't really comment, as I seldom participate in changes to those components. > 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. Well, you had quite a few responses from me, for PRs pertaining to "Commons Math" even though that one I qualify as a "zombie" project! [How it came to that state is told in the "dev" ML.] > No approving, no rejection, no modification suggestions. > If you really wanna details, I will try to make a list for you. Just guessing, but perhaps the issue is the one I outlined in my previous reply (and on the JIRA report which you created ): There are many issues to work on, big to small down to nit-picks; but surely some have higher "added value". Personally I don't think that creating "nit-pick" PRs is the right way for querying the "liveness" of a project. Better ask the question directly on the "dev" ML and/or raise and help solving issues that would block the next release. Regards, Gilles >>> [...] --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: dev-unsubscr...@commons.apache.org For additional commands, e-mail: dev-h...@commons.apache.org