On 12/03/14 10:15, Stefan Schmidt wrote:
> Hello.
>
> On Wed, 2014-03-12 at 09:52, Tom Hacohen wrote:
>> On 12/03/14 09:44, Stefan Schmidt wrote:
>>> Hello.
>>>
>>> On Wed, 2014-03-12 at 08:58, Tom Hacohen wrote:
>>>> Just reading the last few commits that got backported, it seems that 1.9
>>>> was all about breaking ABI. That's just great.
>>>
>>> Which mreminds me about something Cedric and I have talked about.
>>>
>>> http://upstream-tracker.org/
>>>
>>> Some tooling to help indentifying ABI/API breaks. I'm looking for a
>>> volunteer who would like to make use of it for EFL. I see three
>>> options:
>>>
>>> 1) Making the website run on our code more often.
>>>
>>> 2) Run the tools on your own machine our our E servers at least once
>>> or twice in the last week before the release (better would be earlier
>>> as well)
>>>
>>> 3) Setup the tools on our E servers and have it integrated with
>>> jenkins.
>>>
>>> A combination of 1 and 3 would be great imho. I'm not going to work on
>>> this myself though. No more time to mainatin yet another tool in our
>>> CI/QA infrastructure.
>>
>>
>> There are self hosted tools that we can put on Jenkins and run nightly.
>> It's probably better than an external solution.
>>
>>>
>>> Given the recent ABI breaks we should be able to find a volunteer for
>>> this, right?
>>
>> I nominate the release manager.
>
> So you are taking over here from me for 1.10 already? Please confirm
> so I can stop working on it.
>
> You have read the mail. I already stated that I'm not going to set it
> all up.

Trolling aside, you volunteered to be in charge of Jenkins, and that's 
why we changed to Jenkins, for you. Same way I still do Git, and Beber 
still does server/infra admin. It's not because you are the release 
manager, it's because you are the Jenkins manager. :)

No one else knows how to handle Jenkins the way you do. You are really 
the most suitable man for the job.

Furthermore, it's not *too* much work. I could ask Thiago from Qt if 
you'd like. He gave a talk at Edinbrugh about the tools they use to 
ensure API/ABI doesn't break, and I'm sure he'll be more than willing to 
send it to you.

--
Tom.





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