On 06/03/2008, Noel J. Bergman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Daniel Kulp write: > > a quick svn log on their SVN repo for all commits since Jan 1 [suggests > that] > > > all but 4 commits since Jan 1 can easily be contributed to RedHat > employees. > > > > I think the above should provide enough information about the health and > > diversity of the community that actually working on the code. > > > What is the Qpid community's response to these findings? > > > --- Noel
Ok I have a few comments in response to the findings: - Firstly not all work is done on trunk so purely looking at trunk is not a good metric - Looking at the last two months especially as that includes the start of the year which is typically a quite period also will show poor commit numbers. - We are preparing for an M2.1 release so a lot of effort is being expended on that branch. My take would be to look at the last 6 months, which admittedly includes a number of holiday periods so the count of commits may be a little low. Since 2007-09 for the commits on the qpid repository shows: aconway 272 aidan 54 arnaudsimon 230 astitcher 16 cctrieloff 45 gsim 201 kpvdr 11 nsantos 8 rajith 169 rgodfrey 99 rgreig 98 rhs 151 ritchiem 593 rupertlssmith 468 1103 RedHat 1312 Non-Aligned So Redhat have less than half the commits to Qpid so I don't think this is something we should worry about. Keeping an eye on for sure, but over analysing the alignment of those people that don't want to or are not allowed to say who they work for is not something that Apache requires nor would it be beneficial. Saying that we are not diverse because a lot of work on trunk has been done by a small set of people over a two month period is not helpful to the discussion. It is also worth noting that volume of commits does not in anyway correspond to the quantity of code changed and even looking at lines changes cannot say anything for the quality. I think the fact that we have an active project that has matured to the point that where we feel as though we can self regulate in the Apache Way speaks far more to the community of the project than identifying who is paying the bills. The whole project worked very hard to pull together two servers and five client libraries for the M2 release all talking AMQP 0-8. We are again working as a community to provide a M2.1 release that will inter operate at AMQP 0-9 with other AMQP products outside the Apache world. I for one am looking forward to our future releases where we can again move the entire project on to the wholly different AMQP 0-10. -- Martin Ritchie --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]