Hi,

David A. Greene wrote:

>                                                             Essentially,
> I would like to do a "beta" release of the new code while not impacting
> existing users of git-subtree in contrib.

Sounds like a sensible goal.  In-tree, you can do that by saying
"please merge this branch to 'next', but I do not want it in 'master'
yet".  But doing it out-of-tree is even more straightforward, since
you have complete control of the repository people use and do not have
to wait for git to pull in your latest changes.

[...]
> I believe keeping a stable git-subtree in contrib is valuable.

I am not convinced of this.  git-subtree is a well known tool, and in
its role as a separate project then I think distributors are actually
more likely to package it for easy installation by users.  The usual
benefit of contrib of providing visibility for a new project seems to
have already occurred and not be needed as much as it used to be for
this project --- by now it is a very visible project.

[...]
> Does this mode of operation work for the larger git community?  Are
> there suggestions of how to make this work as smoothly as possible?

That said, if we want to keep it in contrib then I think the mode of
operation you described is a good one.

Thanks for your work,
Jonathan

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