As someone who has never participated with intervals before and only just 
recently subscribed to the list, I would like to see a minimum percentage of 
voting members participating in a vote for something to pass. In my 
interpretation of the current rules, a measure could pass with only 3 votes 
cast (2 for / 1 against). In fact, there was a recent proposal that passed with 
only 11 votes cast. If that few of voting members are participating, maybe the 
proposal wasn't clear enough (or maybe it's just not needed at all)?  Sure you 
can argue that they had ample time to discuss, but I would say perhaps they 
just saw no value in it. If a proposal isn't offering enough value for the 
greater community, maybe it doesn't belong in core and should be either a pecl 
extension or userland code?


Joe Constant



On Jan 30, 2016, at 10:34 AM, Andrea Faulds <a...@ajf.me> wrote:

Hi everyone,

The vote on the OpenSSL AEAD RFC[1] has made me question our current RFC 
process again. Under the Voting RFC[2], "Language changes" (in practice, 
changes to syntax and semantics) require at least a 2/3 majority to pass when 
they come to a vote, whereas changes that don't fall under that category 
require a mere plurality of more Yes votes than No votes, aka "50%+1".

The stated justification for the 2/3 requirement is that such changes are more 
permanent and shouldn't be arbitrary. However, there's no justification given 
for why other RFCs *shouldn't* receive the same level of scrutiny.

Consider that the language, in practice, is not simply the syntax and semantics 
specified by the language specification and implemented by the Zend Engine or 
HHVM. PHP's bundled extensions are also an important part of PHP which define 
the language: an implementation of PHP which lacked them would not be very 
useful for running real PHP applications, and it is only with considerable 
difficulty that you could write PHP code without them. In fact, certain key 
primitive operations on PHP's built-in datatypes are only exposed through 
functions in ext/standard! And yet, RFC votes on changes to the extensions are 
held to a lesser standard than changes to the syntax.

Another thing to consider is the types of changes that RFCs propose. These are 
usually used for changes that should not simply get in through consensus around 
a pull request. This can range from simply adding new functions, to making 
backwards-incompatible changes. These are not decisions to be taken lightly.

Finally, I think that a proposal that is good enough will have no trouble 
achieving a 2/3 majority anyway. In practice, many RFCs pass by unanimous vote!

So, would there be support for raising the passing threshold for non-"language 
changes" to 2/3? At the very least, I think we should have this for 
backwards-incompatible changes. If there's enough support, I'll write an RFC, 
though I'll have to figure out how exactly to change the rules. (Can the voting 
RFC be amended by another RFC? The RFC process isn't a good fit for procedural 
things like this.)

Thanks!

[1] https://wiki.php.net/rfc/openssl_aead
[2] https://wiki.php.net/rfc/voting
-- 
Andrea Faulds
https://ajf.me/

-- 
PHP Internals - PHP Runtime Development Mailing List
To unsubscribe, visit: http://www.php.net/unsub.php


--
PHP Internals - PHP Runtime Development Mailing List
To unsubscribe, visit: http://www.php.net/unsub.php

Reply via email to