On Fri, Aug 21, 2015 at 4:09 PM, Peter Bergner <berg...@vnet.ibm.com> wrote:
> On Fri, 2015-08-21 at 16:09 +0200, Andreas Schwab wrote:
>> Ramana Radhakrishnan <ramana....@googlemail.com> writes:
>>
>> > On Fri, Aug 21, 2015 at 11:48 AM, Jonathan Wakely <jwakely....@gmail.com> 
>> > wrote:
>> >> Teams following a different model could use a separate repo shared by
>> >> those developers, not the gcc.gnu.org one. It's much easier to do that
>> >> with git.
>> >
>> > Yes you are right they sure can, but one of the reasons that teams are
>> > doing their development on a feature branch is so that they can obtain
>> > feedback and collaborate with others in the community.
>>
>> It is also much easier for others to pull from foreign repositories with
>> git, so this isn't a severe downside.
>
> It may be easy for git to pull from foreign repositories, but it may
> be difficult/impossible (policy wise) for some developers from some
> companies to be able to write to foreign repositories.  At IBM, we
> cannot host our own source repositories that others can access.  We can
> only write to the official source code repositories for the projects
> that we have clearance to work in.  We currently have an IBM vendor
> directory where we have our branches.  If we move to git (I'm all for
> it), I would hope that those can remain in the official source code
> repository.
>

On re-reading this yes, I see your point and I think that's a valid
argument against forcing folks to go and do their own thing for
foreign repositories for such use cases.


regards
Ramana

> That said, if the GCC project created an "official" side repository
> where branches are stored, we could participate in that.
>
> Peter
>
>
>

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