We have a goal to foster development discussion from the community.
Because of that, I am proposing we move the github notifications to a
new list, puppet-commits. I realize this may have a consequence of
reducing patch/commit discussion. This should be compensated by:
1. Still having a list where pull requests can be commented on
2. Ability to comment on pull requests directly on github
3. More forethought and discussion on the dev list prior to making a
pull request/patch.
4. You can also watch the RSS feed for the puppet projects you have
the most interest in.
This decision isn't final, but I would like to get opinions on the
idea. I welcome feedback until Friday, April 13.
Michael Stahnke
Community Manager
We have a goal to foster development discussion from the community.
Because of that, I am proposing we move the github notifications to a
new list, puppet-commits. I realize this may have a consequence of
reducing patch/commit discussion. This should be compensated by:
I was pretty sure we had this list, and then forgot to look before
sending. Oh well.
Either way, the point remains about removing the github notifications
on the puppet-dev list.
>
> -Jeff
>
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> Everything old is new again.
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+1, for old times sake.
-- M
Michael Stahnke
Community Manager
IMHO, that's not the root cause of the problem. Back to the time we were
sending patches to the list, discussion could spark easily on a topic,
based on a comment on a patch.
Nowadays, I don't even read patches because they're either one click
away or difficult to read in the e-mail. Worst: most of the time I open
the "close" pull request e-mail by mistake (thinking it is the open one)
and struggle to find the real "open" one to read the patch. (I believe
we don't need this "close" e-mail, it just adds unnecessary noise).
One reason the patches are difficult to read is that all sub-patches are
merged in one big chunk, so you're losing the author intent.
More generally the move to github certainly increased the development
team velocity (which is good), it might also have increased the
community contributions, but I think it also decreased the community
involvement on the dev list.
Maybe nobody feels like me or that's because there are much more patches
than there was before, but the dev list was a good way to stay tuned on
what happens in the Puppet code. I just feel it isn't now anymore.
Maybe I'm a dinosaur and I need to follow more carefully what happens on
github :)
Also, a lot of the discussion moved to the pull request in github, so it
disappeared from the dev-list. Now to be part of the discussion, you
need to follow the pull request discussion manually. If you weren't part
of the discussion at start, it now requires more involvement compared to
receiving all discussion in my mail client.
> We have a goal to foster development discussion from the community.
> Because of that, I am proposing we move the github notifications to a
> new list, puppet-commits. I realize this may have a consequence of
> reducing patch/commit discussion. This should be compensated by:
Since the move to github commit discussion happened on github, so that's
a non-issue.
> 1. Still having a list where pull requests can be commented on
> 2. Ability to comment on pull requests directly on github
> 3. More forethought and discussion on the dev list prior to making a
> pull request/patch.
That'd be really great. And I noticed some attempts lately in this
direction, which is really good.
> 4. You can also watch the RSS feed for the puppet projects you have
> the most interest in.
You mean the commit/pull request feed on github, or the redmine feed?
> This decision isn't final, but I would like to get opinions on the
> idea. I welcome feedback until Friday, April 13.
What would be utterly awesome would be better pull request e-mails flow
on this commit (or on the dev) list:
* no close e-mail
* more readable inlined patches (syntax coloring?, broken in different
e-mails per commit?)
* send back to the thread on this list the internal discussion happening
on github
Thanks,
--
Brice Figureau
Follow the latest Puppet Community evolutions on www.planetpuppet.org!
I've been moving more discussions onto puppet-dev in the last few
weeks, as I've been delving more into Puppet code (where normally I
just potter around facter). But mainly its because I miss these
community discussions - for me since the request volume increased I've
felt puppet-dev was harder to wade through so I probably started to
move discussions to private threads or internal lists instead. So I
think the noise is part of the problem tbh.
Personally I really really want the open discussion back, I'm a remote
employee so I can't have hall-way conversations with devs and my other
colleagues - but the silly dev questions I'm going to ask via email I
think are interesting to other community developers - so having them
open to the world I think benefits all.
ken.
> Nowadays, I don't even read patches because they're either one click
> away or difficult to read in the e-mail. Worst: most of the time I open
> the "close" pull request e-mail by mistake (thinking it is the open one)
> and struggle to find the real "open" one to read the patch. (I believe
> we don't need this "close" e-mail, it just adds unnecessary noise).
> One reason the patches are difficult to read is that all sub-patches are
> merged in one big chunk, so you're losing the author intent.
> Maybe nobody feels like me or that's because there are much more patches
> than there was before, but the dev list was a good way to stay tuned on
> what happens in the Puppet code. I just feel it isn't now anymore.
While I still read most of the patches I have to agree with what Brice
has eloquently said throughout his mail. I think it has become harder
to casually keep up as an interested observer and requires a bigger
time investment than it used to, and that's not just because of the
increased development output.
Dean
--
Dean Wilson http://www.unixdaemon.net
Profanity is the one language all programmers understand
--- Anon
What they said.
I agree with Brice. The only way to bring the conversation back here is
not to segment/split the conversation...
James
--
James Turnbull
Puppet Labs
1-503-734-8571
To schedule a meeting with me: http://tungle.me/jamtur01
We have people that want the github noise off of the list.
We have people that want to be able to comment on patches on the list,
but not using the current workflow.
What should we do here? I'm still inclined to promote discussion by
removing the github output from the dev list and switching that to the
commit list. What it sounds like we really want is some magic github
+ mailing list integration that doesn't exists to the best of my
knowledge.
We also got a pretty small sample size in response, so I'm sure that
making any executive decision will sit well.
Round 2 of discussion? Does anybody have any actions proposed that we
can easily take now?
Mike
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If that isn't perfect, we can take another small step to something better.
--
Daniel Pittman
⎋ Puppet Labs Developer – http://puppetlabs.com
♲ Made with 100 percent post-consumer electrons