On Tue, 2005-06-28 at 17:45 -0700, Duncan wrote: > OK, I'm with you on the security thing (being one that would prefer a > USE=clientonly flag, remember, tho I understand the reasons behind not > doing it), but I DO know there's quite the occasional use for someplace to > host scripts, patchlets, and sample config files for reference from > forums/news/lists/irc, that I've personally found useful, that others > would like to see as well.
Honestly, we need a *mirrored and distributed* location for such things. It could easily be accessible from the shell box, but anything that resides on /home on toucan can not be considered safe. While the infrastructure staff does their best to ensure the data there, it is *our* responsibility to keep our own backups of everything there. In fact, there is GLEP15, which deals with this, specifically. > One particular example is my xorg.conf file, which I seem to get > requests for from time to time, when I mention that I have xorg running > xinerama on a dual-out Radeon 9200SE. It seems many have trouble getting > that to work, and an annotated working config can help tremendously. I've > been considering doing it up right and putting it on my web page. Sure, I > can put it on my ISP's page, but folks do change ISPs from time to time, > and for forum mods that are already staff, having a "staffspace" available > to make such things a bit more publicly available, could be /quite/ useful. Again, toucan is *not* this place, as has been said many times by infrastructure. Anything on dev.gentoo.org should be considered transitive, as it can disappear at any time. A more permanent solution to this should be done, rather than relying on something that we have been told time and time again that we should *not* rely on. This being said, I'm pretty guilty of this myself, with one minor exception. I keep my own backups. :P > The form of the URLs such resources get make it quite clear that while > hosted on a gentoo server, they are in personal devspace/staffspace on > that server, so there should be little chance of confusion with "official" > packages, particularly if there's a policy in place (I haven't seen one > but that doesn't mean it doesn't exist) to clearly mark any HTML formatted > anchor tags with non-obfuscated descriptions and URLs. (The forum > software may or may not make obfuscated URLs impossible, I don't know.) -- Chris Gianelloni Release Engineering - Strategic Lead/QA Manager Games - Developer Gentoo Linux
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