http://ironruby.codeplex.com is live. Please direct any bug submissions and 
downloads of IronRuby to this site, rather than RubyForge. RubyForge bugs will 
be moved (as appropriate) to CodePlex over time, and v0.3 is on CodePlex, along 
with sources. Releases may be posted to both sites, simply for exposure, but 
please link to the CodePlex copy (as http://ironruby.net/Download does).
RubyForge's only use is now the mailing list, though I'm looking to move that 
as well (with minimal downtime to this list). I'll keep you all posted.
~Jimmy
From: ironruby-core-boun...@rubyforge.org 
[mailto:ironruby-core-boun...@rubyforge.org] On Behalf Of Jimmy Schementi
Sent: Tuesday, April 07, 2009 5:02 PM
To: ironruby-core@rubyforge.org
Subject: Re: [Ironruby-core] Proposal: Moving IronRuby bugs to CodePlex

No 
objections/concerns/thoughts/concerns/praises/gifts-of-gold-frankincense-and-myrrh?
 Ok then ...
http://ironruby.codeplex.com/ has been created, and once live all bugs will be 
stored there. Jim is going through RubyForge bugs slowly, closing ones that are 
fixed, and possibly moving important ones over to CodePlex. I'll let you all 
know when CodePlex is open for business.
~js
From: ironruby-core-boun...@rubyforge.org 
[mailto:ironruby-core-boun...@rubyforge.org] On Behalf Of Jimmy Schementi
Sent: Thursday, April 02, 2009 3:36 PM
To: ironruby-core@rubyforge.org
Subject: [Ironruby-core] Proposal: Moving IronRuby bugs to CodePlex

(I originally planned on sending this yesterday, but I waited until today to 
remove the "April Fools" possibility =P)
I'd like to propose moving IronRuby's bugs off of RubyForge. CodePlex looks 
like the best option, mainly due to the voting feature for bugs. Here are some 
possible options for defect tracking, and what I think about them:
Lighthouse: http://lighthouseapp.com
Sample site: http://silverline.lighthouseapp.com
Very usable, nice UI, and I'm a sucker for those types of things. They support 
multiple projects, so splitting up the project into Compiler, Libraries, 
Silverlight, etc, would be very clear. There's also a nice UI for milestone 
progress, making it fairly clear how the progress is going. Also, other Ruby 
projects are moving here, so a move to Lighthouse would follow the logic of why 
we started on RubyForge.
Lighthouse also has integration with GitHub, keeping our lighthouse page 
up-to-date with any changes in git.
Lighthouse is usually a pay-service, but I believe they have free hosting for 
open-source projects. However, there might be limits on how many projects can 
be created, or users can be admins, so it'd be good to find out these details.
Unfortunately, there's no good way to prioritize tickets other than milestones, 
and non-project-admins can't change the milestone, so we can't accomplish any 
type of user-prioritization (voting) on tickets.
RubyForge: http://rubyforge.org
Sample site: http://rubyforge.org/projects/ironruby
We're on RubyForge currently, so switching to RubyForge would be easy. =P 
Unfortunately, that's about the only benefit it provides. While RubyForge has 
been instrumental in shaping the Ruby community, it appears that its heydays 
have passed, in favor of GitHub and lighthouse. RubyForge also appears to be 
unmaintained, especially in light of our crazy mailing list delays. File 
releases are still being used by the Ruby community, mainly because of it being 
a Ruby Gems repository, so we should keep releasing on it.
CodePlex: http://codeplex.com
Sample site: http://ironpython.codeplex.com
CodePlex has turned into a pretty awesome open-source project site. In the past 
I wouldn't have wanted to move to CodePlex, but now there defect tracking 
features seem like the best, and much faster than they use to be. You can use 
the web interface, the team foundation client, or CodePlex client to look at 
bugs, which makes it pretty easy to keep on-top of them. Since CodePlex uses 
TFS underneath to store work-items and bugs, we can use the TFS API to do git 
commit integration and things like that (though the TFS API isn't the greatest, 
it exists =P). But mainly the web interface has voting support, so our tickets 
can be prioritized by community feedback very easily ... this is definitely the 
killer feature for me.
As I said, I'm leaning heavily towards CodePlex, mainly for the voting support. 
IronPython uses this very successfully, and it would help prioritize IronRuby's 
work, especially post-1.0.
So here's the proposal:

1.       Go through open RubyForge bugs, closing bugs as necessary, and 
narrowing in on a subset to move to CodePlex (jdeville has begun closing bugs).

2.       Create http://ironruby.codeplex.com (already reserved, just waiting to 
set things up and turn it on), and use it for *Issues* and *Releases* only. We 
will link to http://wiki.github.com/ironruby/ironruby for other developer 
information, and http://ironruby.net for general users, from the project 
homepage, and no other wiki pages will be used.

3.       Releases will be the only things remaining on RubyForge, as it's still 
the standard place for Ruby releases, though any release announcements/blogs 
will point to the CodePlex release.

4.       CodePlex discussion forums will not be used, as they and will remain 
on RubyForge for now (though we need to resolve the crazy delays soon).
Thoughts?
~Jimmy
_______________________________________________
Ironruby-core mailing list
Ironruby-core@rubyforge.org
http://rubyforge.org/mailman/listinfo/ironruby-core

Reply via email to