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Re: Proposal: Subversion Migration


From: Richard Frith-Macdonald
Subject: Re: Proposal: Subversion Migration
Date: Sun, 16 Oct 2005 05:14:29 +0000

On 2005-10-15 18:26:20 +0000 Alex Perez <aperez@student.santarosa.edu> wrote:

Richard Frith-Macdonald wrote:
My 'vote', for what it's worth, is to stick with CVS for a while.

I don't want to get dragged in to the discussion on this, but ...

1. I don't think that the flaws in CVS are causing people a great deal of difficulty in practice or holding back GNUstep development.

Of course you don't..you're a core developer, with carte blanche CVS access. Please, for the sake of others who may be interested in contributing, but just not willing to put up with whining about too-large patches, etc, take a step back, put yourself in someone else's shoes, and try to look at where the people who are proposing are coming from, instead of just saying "oh, everything looks fine to me"

Why is it that when I state an opinion you leap back with insults ...
First, by implication, accuse me of not thinking about it.
Then, attribute a different (extreme) opinion to me!

2. I don't see a clear winner for which system we should migrate to... opinoins are very varied and I don't have the experience myself.

Opinions are just that. Andrew started the discussion because he had a legitimate concern about this as an issue.

I fail to see your point here.
Andrew sent in a reasoned (and polite) email and has had a largely positive response ... but In this thread people have pointed out alternative mechanisms to address his concerns without moving from CVS, and have generally made a case that there may be better options for a move than subversion.

So, while I have no objection to someone putting in all the practical work to do a move (as long as they make it easy for developers like me to make the change), it seems to me that there is not a lot of urgency, and it looks like the field of version control systems is in a state of flux, so a wait and see approach seems sensible.

Once again, of course it doesn't seem urgent to you. Nobody's claiming it's an URGENT matter. For that matter, why must you wait for it to be?

Again, your rhetorical style is to invent a nonexistent position to attack.
There is no implication that something must be urgent to be done, there was merely a reminder that if something is not urgent, you can afford to spend time sorting out the best options.

Consider it preventative maintenance. Consider it an investment in GNUstep's future. I'm frankly rather frustrated that the core devs are taking such a shortsighted view of the issue, because they have CVS access already. Indifference breeds defeat.

Other people in this thread (not me, I've been an observer) have advanced reasoned arguments for and against different options. I strongly approve of that sort of debate. But once a thread degenerates to flame/flamebait there is not usually much point continuting. It may well be that your style of writing does your causes more harm than good.

By a 'while' I mean something like waiting six months and then revisting the topic.

What purpose will that serve, other than to defer the inevitable transition from CVS?

Give us a better chance to select the best solution.  Is that not obvious?

I think we're all in agreement, *in principle* that there are better things out there and they could benefit us from using it. The problem is that some folks are obsessing about the specifics, instead of agreeing on the points that they agree on, and disagreeing on the points with which they disagree.

There I can agree with you.

The world isn't black and white, even if our logo is.

Please remember that, next time you feel the urge to write polemic.






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