Folks: I tried out darchaeology for a minute or two yesterday, and I didn't see what I could do with it that I don't already do with trac-darcs, like this:
http://allmydata.org I can imagine some things that a local app could do nicely that trac can't, for example a graphical patch browser that shows the directed acyclic graph of patch dependencies, and the tri-state setting on each patch of "select/unselect/dont-care". What does darchaeology do, or what will it do, which trac-darcs doesn't? Is there a wiki page for tools that work with or extend darcs? I am aware of several such tools, and yesterday I discovered several more that I was previously unaware of. We should aggregate, document, and publicize these: cia_darcs.rb (thanks to Manveru) cia_darcs.py (thanks to vmiklos) cia_darcs.pl (thanks to Patrick McFarland) darcs-graph (thanks to Don Stewart) darcsstats (thanks to vmiklos) deps.pl (originally due to Alberto Bertogli) Tailor (originally due to Lele Gaifax with many contributors) trac-darcs (originally due to Lele Gaifax with many contributors) darchaeology (thanks to John Clayton) ann2ascii (originally due to Alberto Bertogli) Others? I've noticed that several of these tools have started to bit-rot or disappear entirely from the net (does anyone have a copy of deps.pl?), perhaps because the original author has stopped maintaining it. We should publicize and organize these so that they can become community-maintained in the case that the original author stops maintaining them. Actually, we should commit at least some of them to the core darcs repository in a "contrib" subdirectory, in order for them to have maximum visibility and availability. Could the darcs devs please consider that option (again)? Regards, Zooko _______________________________________________ darcs-users mailing list darcs-users@darcs.net http://lists.osuosl.org/mailman/listinfo/darcs-users