What Till said is true for FlinkML, until all the moving parts are in place there's not much point in annotating any as Public. The Spark project has the @Experimental tag IIRC, that would fit our case better.
On Wed, Nov 23, 2016 at 4:09 PM, Till Rohrmann <trohrm...@apache.org> wrote: > I think in general annotating library methods/classes is a good idea. The > question is just which APIs are going to be marked stable. > > In the past we've seen that we might have marked some of Flink's APIs > stable too early. As a consequence we have to carry them along for quite > some time (at the very least until Flink 2.0). > > If we now come to the conclusion that the library APIs are not yet stable > enough to mark them Public, then we will probably mark a lot of the API > PublicEvolving which adds only little value for the user. > > Cheers, > Till > > On Wed, Nov 23, 2016 at 2:25 PM, Aljoscha Krettek <aljos...@apache.org> > wrote: > > > I would be for also annotating library methods/classes. Maybe Robert has > a > > stronger opinion on this because he introduced these annotations. > > > > On Tue, 22 Nov 2016 at 18:56 Greg Hogan <c...@greghogan.com> wrote: > > > > > Hi all, > > > > > > Should stable APIs in Flink's CEP, ML, and Gelly libraries be annotated > > > @Public or restricted to use of @PublicEvolving? > > > > > > We would ensure that library APIs do not add restrictions to the core > > APIs. > > > Libraries could use @PublicEvolving or @Internal core APIs within > @Public > > > or @PublicEvolving components as long as the functionality could be > > adapted > > > or rewritten as necessary. An example: CombineHint is @Internal. Gelly > > > could use CombineHint in a @Public method but could not accept > > CombineHint > > > as a parameter to a @Public method. > > > > > > Greg > > > > > >