Hi, On Sun, May 13, 2012 at 02:00:32PM +0300, Alon Bar-Lev wrote: > >> Can't we progress? > > > > Why is that progress? > > > > Change always has drawbacks. If the plus sides outweighs the drawbacks, > > change is good. Change for change's sake, "just because you can change > > it", is not. > > Yes, but still from your responses I don't see any drawback... maybe I > am slow learner...
Drawback to maintainers and sysadmins has already been mentioned by ecrist and me. Try being a sysadmin for a few weeks and figure out which bits of xorg you need to download to install xinit, assuming you have a system without any X libraries and headers yet (in the xorg example: splitting off "xinit" might actually make sense, but splitting the basic infrastructure to build anything into about 50 different "xyz-library" and "xyz-headers" packages is crazyness). But the onus is not particularily on me: you have not put forward convincing arguments why splitting off a very small number of files that only make use in the context of OpenVPN into their own repository has any *advantage*. The handwavy argument "it will attract more users!" can be countered by similarily handwaving "I, as a user, hate to download multiple packages to figure out how to start contributing, and so it will scare *away* users". As a counterexample, look at Apache. They have heaps of modules in the main tarball, and have no issues with frequent release and with attracting developers. And still, modules maintained by non-apache developers can be developed externally, without having to splitt off all existing modules beforehand. gert -- USENET is *not* the non-clickable part of WWW! //www.muc.de/~gert/ Gert Doering - Munich, Germany g...@greenie.muc.de fax: +49-89-35655025 g...@net.informatik.tu-muenchen.de
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