Hello Peter, I've forked apache/marmotta here [1] and added you in my collaborators list. I also cloned the code from github. But it seems some of the maven modules in the develop branch do not compile, e.g. marmotta-commons and marmotta-rio-rss. Is that the right situation now?
yours, hello [1] https://github.com/junyuew/marmotta On Sun, May 17, 2015 at 9:09 AM, Peter Ansell <[email protected]> wrote: > Hi Junjue, > > It will be simplest to track if you fork the Marmotta repository at > GitHub and create a branch named "MARMOTTA-593". > > Add me as a collaborator to the GitHub repository. My GitHub id is > "ansell". > > The collaborators list for my fork is at: > > https://github.com/ansell/marmotta/settings/collaboration > > When you fork it, you can replace "ansell" with your GitHub id and use > that page to add me to the list of collaborators. > > Yes, the code will be merged to Marmotta in the end. > > You should create a new module inside of marmotta-sesame-tools named > "marmotta-rio-rdfht" > > > https://github.com/apache/marmotta/tree/master/commons/marmotta-sesame-tools > > You will also need to add a format constant into marmotta-rio-api as a > new folder in the following directory, similar to the current 3 > folders there: > > > https://github.com/apache/marmotta/tree/master/commons/marmotta-sesame-tools/marmotta-rio-api/src/main/java/org/apache/marmotta/commons/sesame/rio > > Cheers, > > Peter > > > Cheers, > > Peter > > On 16 May 2015 at 22:19, Junyue Wang <[email protected]> wrote: > > Hello Sergio, Peter, > > > > It's my honor to be a GSoC student. I appreciate your help for the > comments > > of the project proposal. > > I read the proposed methodology you pointed out. But it seems my project > is > > only related to Sesame and RDF HDT, without touching the code base of > > Marmotta. Should I fork Marmotta in github, or start a new repository > there? > > Will my code be merged into Marmotta in the end? If so, which module of > > Marmotta? > > > > yours, > > junyue > > > > On Thu, Apr 30, 2015 at 2:41 PM, Sergio Fernández <[email protected]> > wrote: > > > >> Hi Peter, > >> > >> On Wed, Apr 29, 2015 at 1:12 AM, Peter Ansell <[email protected]> > >> wrote: > >>> > >>> Those guidelines look great to me, especially the suggestion about the > >>> branch name including the Jira issue, which I have found very useful > >>> in all of my git-based projects. In the RDF/HDT case, and possibly in > >>> the GeoSPARQL case, the contributed code could be in the form of a new > >>> module, so there won't be much interference with the rest of the > >>> codebase during that time. However, it is still useful to regularly > >>> merge the "develop" branch into each of the branches to keep up to > >>> date and reduce the number of merge conflicts occurring near the end > >>> when the students will be rushing to complete the project. > >> > >> > >> Great you like it, Peter :-) > >> > >> I expect less merge conflicts, nevertheless it's a more concrete > library; > >> with the GeoSPARQL project that workflow is much more important. > >> > >> I've just have one concern about the documentation. Last year I had > >> formatting issues bringing that documentation into the wiki (MoinMoin > >> syntax is not markdown, unfortunately). Do you think is better to do it > >> directly in the wiki? > >> > >> I'd love to hear comments from our students, after all you're the ones > who > >> need to follow that proposed methodology. > >> > >> Cheers, > >> > >> -- > >> Sergio Fernández > >> Partner Technology Manager > >> Redlink GmbH > >> m: +43 6602747925 > >> e: [email protected] > >> w: http://redlink.co > >> >
