On Thu, Mar 25, 2010 at 12:47 PM, Antony Dovgal <t...@daylessday.org> wrote:
> You can as well stop declaring (!?) what FPM should and what it shoud not > and start doing something useful instead. > Writing some code might be a good start for you. As someone Andrei somewhat entrusted to try to keep the dream of FPM alive, I'll Also, I am an avid user and spokesperson for FPM. I don't write C, and I wouldn't attempt to write C for something as important as a daemon that supports heavily loaded websites (furthermore, why would you want me to start there) - I contribute any way I can, which has included [a little] money [and offers of more, but nobody has accepted], time, and support. I've offered different build environments (if we had any need for automated testing) I have a lot of resources available, just not coding. I'll ignore your elitist comment. RFCs should be open for anyone, as should discussions, and I am not "declaring" what it should do any more than anyone else with any ideas. If you want a "coders only" thing maybe this open source project should be taken behind closed doors and only those people who have proven themselves worthy of commenting on anything (who cares about the users? they're only the majority of the open source world) can be allowed to participate. Also I don't remember "declaring" anything. My comments about includes are the same kind of thing -anyone- can interject. I guess I just don't have enough "karma" to be valued in your world. I have done nothing but be appreciative and respectful of you, and always take your opinion as more informed as mine. -- PHP Internals - PHP Runtime Development Mailing List To unsubscribe, visit: http://www.php.net/unsub.php