2014-04-08 10:30 GMT+02:00 Joachim Breitner <[email protected]>: > we also need a culture of just doing stuff, and less asking for it.
Yes, I was educated in the same spirit but in the FreeBSD Project. I did not ask much for it when I replicated the whole setup just for myself last year. > if you want people to join their builders, tell them what > information you need from them and add them. Feel free to modify the > wiki so that people find you. Make up some rules (about usernames etc.) > as you go, if necessary. That is good to hear. First, I had the impression from the previous discussions that Ian's solution is not proven enough so you want to go for some other solution. Second, I do not want to duplicate anybody else's efforts. Although I have already stated that I am willing to let others connect to my server and replied the related mails, but I felt that the offer was still ignored or lost. I do not want to be pushy, I do not like stepping on other's toes. But actually I can if that is what you want -- that is how I did eight BSD workshops and developer summits in the last four years and eventually become the secretary of the FreeBSD Core Team. > Just do it. And tell us about your achievements. I guess the ghc-builds mailing list speaks for itself. > Also worry less about official or not. The Travis setup is not official, > but (IMHO) has been useful quite a few times. I'd _like_ it to be > official, i.e. hosted on git.haskell.org, but that is not important. All right, if the rules of game are like that, let it be so... > If your service becomes "critical" in some sense it is still time to > move it some official infrastructure... but that can come second, and > should not hinder anyone from contributing. Okay, thanks for the clarification! _______________________________________________ ghc-devs mailing list [email protected] http://www.haskell.org/mailman/listinfo/ghc-devs
