Dear caml-list,

During the last year or two it seems that time and interest in OCaml 
maintenance from the official OCaml development team is diminishing. It takes 
several months to get a patch reviewed (if at all), which is quite frustrating 
for OCaml contributors and even worse for OCaml users. I suspect that this is 
one of the top reasons why there are only a few active contributors to OCaml 
(and the number of active users, at least on the mailing list, is declining).

I understand that INRIA does not necessarily pay people for full time 
maintenance jobs on OCaml (and Coq), and the official dev team is probably 
already doing as much as possible to maintain OCaml. Given that OCaml is such a 
nice language with a lot of useful frameworks available, it is too sad to see 
it loosing ground just because of it's closed development process and lack of 
time of the official team.

I'd therefore propose to open up OCaml development to a wider range of 
developers / contributors, to ensure that OCaml will be ready for the 
(functional programming) future. There are already various "OCaml forks" in the 
wild, with different goals and patch sets, so simply starting another fork 
would be rather useless. Instead I'd suggest to bundle efforts in a new "OCaml 
community fork", which is always based on the most recent upstream OCaml 
release (starting point would be 3.12.1 for now), and takes care to review and 
integrate pending patches as well as developing and testing new features. Let's 
say we'd name the fork "OCaml-ng", then we'd try to release a new patch set 
every month or two, based on the official OCaml release, i.e. 
"ocaml-3.12.1+ng201112" and so on, to get early testing and feedback (should 
work together closely with the Debian/Ubuntu/etc. OCaml maintainers).

With this process, OCaml upstream could merge (tested) patches from OCaml-ng 
once they proved working in the wild, and thereby

1. maintenance overhead for INRIA people is reduced,
2. maintenance status of OCaml would be way better,
3. there would be a lot less frustration for possible contributors, and
4. users benefit from a better and more up to date OCaml.

Now that does of course raise a few questions:

1. What is the opinion of the official development team / INRIA on this?
2. Who would help with the community fork?
3. What about infrastructure?

Feedback and suggestions are welcome.

Benedikt

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