On Sunday 31 August 2008 15:23:38 P Zoltan wrote: > On Fri, 29 Aug 2008 21:55:43 +0200, Alan Grimes <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > > wrote: > >> I'm waiting for feedback :D > > > > keep up the good work. This type of work will be critical to pushing > > Ktechlab forward in the future. > > > > Also, see about getting a SVN account. > > I've sent a message to Jason Lucas about this, so I hope I will get an > account sooner or later. I have just been about to do that..... So now I don't need to do that any longer ;)
> The problem is that in most part of the year I have an Internet > connection through a firewall which blocks almost everything -- SVN is > blocked, too. Sending patches with mail works anyway. What a pitty. The point is, that svn doesn't respect the person who wrote the patch, but only the one who does the commit. We could work-around that by adding a "patch by" comment in the commit message, but I don't know if this is a good way to go. > In my opinion, sending patches has another advantage: knowing that your > changes will be read by others, you don't want to make > ugly/hacky/unreadable things in the patch. At least I for myself read the commit logs and review all the patches that go into svn. That is also a very good way to stay up to date with the code-base. I see the advantage of patch-based development because there is at least one person that does a review of the patch, before it goes into the repository, but svn isn't the right source code management tool to do that. That is also the reason why the kde guys are discussing to switch to a distributed scm system (most people want to see git, but also mercurial is a possible candidate). If we want to have this patch-based development, we should consider such a switch, too. This doesn't mean, we have to give up the sourceforge svn repository. I am willing to host a git repository and do all the merging stuff with svn. This way Alan can go on commiting directly into the svn and you can send patches to the list. I can push them into the git repo and sync this to svn. The only thing you have to change is creating your patches with the git patch utility. This makes sure your name shows up as the original author of the patch. As I mentioned before, I'd like to see ktechlab to be part of the kdeedu project some day. If the kde guys do the switch to git, we already have the whole project history in a compatible format to make the merging with their repository easy. What do you think? bye then julian
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