+1 from me, although I don't contribute to cmislib, and as a matter of fact I would also support moving the Java chemistry codebase to git.
Florent On Fri, Oct 20, 2017 at 9:31 AM, Laurent Mignon <lmig...@apache.org> wrote: > Hi, > > As a new committer I confess that it is not easy to find the process to > follow to propose new improvements or bug fix to chemistry-cmislib and to > allow the code review by others. > > In recent years, tools such as gitlab, github, bitbucket,... have emerged > and all propose a simple way to organize, manage and support project > developments. > > In discussions with Jeff and Florian on this topic, Florian mentioned that > the ASF now offers a tool for integrating projects with Github. ( > https://gitbox.apache.org/) > > As a regular user of these tools for others OS projects I would like to > propose moving the cmislib project to GIT/github. > > This change would allow: > * A better visibility of the project > * A better publicity of ongoing changes and improvements > * A simpler review process open to everyone > * The use of continuous integration servers such as' TravisCI' and tools > for analysis and visualization of code quality such as' CodeClimate'. > > I also think that the use of tools widely used by the python community > could make the project more attractive. > > What do you think about that? > > Regards, > > Laurent > -- [image: Nuxeo] Florent Guillaume Head of R&D Twitter: @efge