"Martin v. Löwis" wrote: > As some may have been noticed, I started urging contributors more > intensely to submit contributor forms before accepting their patches. > I encourage all committers to do the same, for non-trivial changes. > > You may wonder what changed between before and now: we (the PSF) now > have a good management of the forms, thanks to them being listed in > Roundup, and thanks to Pat (Campbell) keeping track of all forms that > we receive. So we (the committers) are now in a position to actually > verify that we have a contrib form received before deciding whether or > not to commit a patch.
The devguide [1] currently says: It’s unlikely bug fixes will require a Contributor Licensing Agreement unless they touch a lot of code. For new features, it is preferable to ask that the contributor submit a signed CLA to the PSF as the associated comments, docstrings and documentation are far more likely to reach a copyrightable standard. Is this still the case? How about new features that are quite small? (e.g. http://bugs.python.org/issue14809 whose patch adds a few constants from a newer RFC) If we are to require a signed agreement from smaller changes too, the devguide should be updated. [1] http://docs.python.org/devguide/committing.html#contributor-licensing-agreements _______________________________________________ python-committers mailing list python-committers@python.org http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-committers