On 17. 01. 19 17:26, Adam Williamson wrote:
If a project is enforcing sign-off but doesn't have
the DCO or any other kind of prominent statement of what the sign-off
is*for*, that is meaningless, because there's no reasonable context
for the sign-off text.

Exactly.

Also, the text sometimes is a bit weird:

(fedpkg as an example)
"All commits must be signed-off on. Please use git commit -s to do that. This serves as a confirmation that you have the right to submit your changes. See Developer Certificate of Origin for details."

This should IMHO rather say something like:

"We require all the contributors to agree with the Developer Certificate of Origin. To confirm that you do, sign off your commits. Please use git commit -s to do that."


What bothers me that while I understand that there is some meaning for the signed-off commits (however snake oil legalese it really appears), the enforcement doesn't explain it and simply says: Sign off your commits! Do it! You have to!

And when you do, you do it because it's a technical requirement. You are not aware that you are performing some kind of agreement with a legal document.


So to make this a bit better, can we change the enforcement wording on Pagure?

Say:

We require all the contributors to agree with the Developer Certificate of Origin. To confirm that you do, sign off your commits. Please use git commit -s to do that. We unfortunately don't accept commits without that.

Instead of:

Sign your commits!

--
Miro Hrončok
--
Phone: +420777974800
IRC: mhroncok
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