On Sat, 10 Apr 2010 15:48:36 +0200, Thorsten wrote:
>> IMHO)
> RFEs like this are in need of _somebody_ to make decisions.
I would agree for most RFE's.
But not for this specific RFE: There is (afaics) no real downside for
users. So there is not much to discuss IMHO, it just needs somebody to
do it and work out the details -- and start a privte or public
discussion in case problems emerge where a discussion and a decision is
needed.
But discussing that without knowing that anybody will work further on it
seems like a lot of wasted time for me.
Work on _what_? The bugzilla ticket has not seen any reply since May 2009.
No feedback, no discussion, no progress, no effort spent on researching
alternative solutions. Plus: koji+bodhi for rpmfusion has been mentioned
a year ago (or even before that), with no status updates or public discussion.
As where you see "a lot of wasted time", dunno. Lengthy discussions
are _not_ needed. (Though, somebody who will switch to koji+bodhi+mash
must consider the consequences, e.g. very likely increased maintenance
requirements). Time _is_ wasted, when after many months old/unchanged
software is still being used, and suddenly there is a need (or request)
to add something to it. Sometimes that means that months pass without
even small steps being made.
> Where something sucks, it needs
> somebody to say "we want to improve in that area" and to put something
> onto an agenda (or call it "wishlist").
Maybe yes, but in RPM Fusion that IMHO didn't help much until now, as we
are (afaics) to few people. Take the repoclosure scripts for example --
it now years ago was definitely planed to run them after each push and
you even did some groudwork to make it easy for our sysadmins to
integrate (thx again for that), but they never got installed on our
servers (and there were many situations where the lack of automated
repoclosure scripts was discussed on this list, so it was never really
forgotten).
Over the past months, I have replied to several people who had contacted
me about broken deps reports (even EPEL related once more). I've seen
nothing else than promises. No one has returned with specific questions
about yum-util's original repoclosure. No one has sent any feedback,
no one has shown any credible interest in creating broken deps reports
and/or in collaborating on related helper scripts (Python and/or bash).
Running repoclosure (the original one or the modified one) with
different options for different sets of repositories isn't a lot of
home work. It's a tool like many others (e.g. repoquery, repodiff).
Except that anyone, who really wants to start using it, will need
to give it a try and gain a little bit of experience while doing so.
The larger excercise has been to fix it, to port it (to Yum APIs),
to hack it -- and to keep helper/report scripts running -- but such
activity can be distributed between a tool's users and its developers.