On 2006.10.07 00:26, Chris Gianelloni wrote:
On Fri, 2006-10-06 at 10:24 +0100, Roy Bamford wrote:
> Before you can have useful reports, you need a plan to report
against.
> Like a target date for 2007.0 and its contents. Such a plan depends
on
> other projects delivering the contents in accordance with their own
> plans. Like real life, these plans will have external dependencies
on
> $UPSTREAM, that Gentoo has little or no control over.
Please stop assuming that Release Engineering has any control over
what goes on in the tree. Not only do we not have any such control,
we also do not *want* any such control.
[snip]
I'll be honest, Release Engineering work is *very* stressful. My
primary goal as the lead is to try to come up with ways to make
working on a release easier for the guys doing the work. I don't see
how doing reporting improves their lives. After all, we put out four
"reports" a year, two releases, and two meetings between the releases
where we plan the next release. Anything more than that is wasteful.
;]
--
Chris Gianelloni
Release Engineering Strategic Lead
Alpha/AMD64/x86 Architecture Teams
Games Developer/Council Member/Foundation Trustee
Gentoo Foundation
Chris,
I understand you don't have any control over what goes on in the tree.
In Gentoo, nobody outside of the individual projects does. My post was
not intended as a crit of yourself or the Release Engineering team.
I replied in your part of the thread because Release Engineering are
the obvious users of the mooted plans and reports.
As long as Gentoo is organised as an anarchy, which I have seen work
well in other groups, then the status quo is fine. If Gentoo is to be
organised as a single project, then some bureaucracy to oil the wheels
is needed. In turn, that would mean setting up a management body of
some sort (not Release Engineering) but that's a whole new thread. No
replies to that here please.
Either organisation can work providing the contributors want it to make
it work but there will always be some dissenters discussing change
(change != improvement). That's a healthy sign in any group.
Regards,
Roy Bamford
(NeddySeagoon)
--
gentoo-dev@gentoo.org mailing list