On Tue, Oct 25, 2011 at 7:33 PM, HB-GRAL <flightg...@sablonier.ch> wrote:
> Am 25.10.11 18:54, schrieb Gijs de Rooy:
>> No matter what aircraft-split we end up with, aircraft authors will always 
>> be able to update their own aircraft at
>> any time.
>
> Hope so ;-)
>
> With the current setup you can for example commit (and accept merge
> requests) for your EC130:https://gitorious.org/flightgear-aircraft/ec130
>
> But I want to give commit rights to my wife to my repo, without asking
> you, can I do that ? Why not ? What gives "the team" the right to decide
> if my wife could be contributor in my aircraft project or not ?!
>
>>
>> When you start on a new aircraft and would like to have its repository under 
>> the FlightGear Aircraft project, you
>> do have to ask one of the people from "the team": 
>> https://gitorious.org/+flightgear-aircraft
>
> For every single aircraft ? Hm, everyone ?
>
>> You also have to contact that teammembers when you'd like to get access to 
>> an existing repo (or give someone
>> else access to your aircraft's repo).
>
> "Sorry, Peter is not here since six months, but Paul - ok, he does not
> know a lot about your project - but he will give access to Alex, to
> update Sabins repo permissions."



The #1 reason I haven't added my projects (MD-81, Grumman Goose,
Edgley Optica, Velocity XL RG) to the repository is that I have no
ability to perform my own commits. Possibly I haven't earned the right
and I can understand that. But I would like to learn and understand
the procedure for how one earns these rights, and maybe others would
too.

Don't get me wrong-- for core FG work I readily see the value in
maintaining a short-list of those with commit rights and/or
peer-review before commits. But for non-core work such as aircraft
projects, it's somewhat bothersome. In the past Durk has been kind
enough to submit my 1049H Constellation to the repository. I'm
grateful and I am certain he would readily continue to do so. But I
dislike troubling him (or anyone else) to do it. Durk and others do
great work here and I don't like adding busy-work to their plate.

-Gary aka Buckaroo

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