Dne 10. 05. 24 v 11:47 odp. Gary Buhrmaster napsal(a):
Unless the BZs force a package to be
updated you may very well end up with
~20% of the Fedora packages nearly
forever not being updated with proper
SPDX licenses as they are as likely or
not going to be forever be on re-build
auto-pilot (than
On Fri, May 3, 2024 at 9:40 AM Miroslav Suchý wrote:
> The current change
>
> https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Changes/SPDX_Licenses_Phase_4
>
> is planned to be the last one. At the end of this phase - scheduled to
> 2024-08-06 - we plan to mark this conversion as "done". My estimation is that
Dne 03. 05. 24 v 10:44 dop. Tim Landscheidt napsal(a):
Maybe I misunderstood the original post, but I did not per-
ceive the intent of the data's publication to be informative
and useful, but to motivate (converting the licenses).
This.
And to provide at least some estimates. When we started w
Dne 03. 05. 24 v 1:59 dop. Gary Buhrmaster napsal(a):
Joking aside, I do agree the non-trivial conversions are
likely to be the hard ones, and there will be a very long
tail (many years more) for 100% as the work to deal with
some of those hard ones may require expertise that is
in limited or eve
John Reiser wrote:
>> New projection when we will be finished is 2025-04-06 (+5
>> days from last report). Pure linear approximation.
> Such a linear approximation, based on the entire tracked history,
> is the second worst possible estimate. (The worst possible estimate
> is the output of a r
On 4/26/24 11:20, Miroslav Suchý wrote:
New projection when we will be finished is 2025-04-06 (+5 days from last
report). Pure linear approximation.
Such a linear approximation, based on the entire tracked history,
is the second worst possible estimate. (The worst possible estimate
is the ou
On Thu, May 2, 2024 at 6:11 PM Matthew Miller wrote:
> Just eyeballing the prediction graph in the Google doc, it looks like the
> linear approximation is distorted by the big drop in "non-trivial" last
> September. And, the slope for "converted" is pretty steep before that, but
> significantly f
On Thu, May 2, 2024 at 8:11 PM Matthew Miller wrote:
>
> If we extrapolate linearly just from 2023-09-29 on, that gives an end-date
> of 2026-02-22. And linearly is probably optimistic too, given the classic
> "last 10% is 90% of the time" thing.
That sounds reasonable, but we'll also be enjoying
On Fri, Apr 26, 2024 at 08:20:43PM +0200, Miroslav Suchý wrote:
> Graph of these data with the burndown chart:
>
> https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1QVMEzXWML-6_Mrlln02axFAaRKCQ8zE807rpCjus-8s/edit?usp=sharing
[...]
> New projection when we will be finished is 2025-04-06 (+5 days from last
>