On 06.10.20 14:41, Philippe Mathieu-Daudé wrote:
> On 10/6/20 11:44 AM, Alex Bennée wrote:
>>
>> Jan Kiszka <jan.kis...@siemens.com> writes:
>>
>>> On 05.10.20 22:52, Joseph Myers wrote:
>>>> On Mon, 5 Oct 2020, Alex Bennée wrote:
>>>>
>>>>> Joseph Myers <jos...@codesourcery.com> writes:
>>>>>
>>>>>> On Sun, 4 Oct 2020, Philippe Mathieu-Daudé wrote:
>>>>>>
>>>>>>> There is a number of contributors from this domain,
>>>>>>> add its own entry to the gitdm domain map.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> At some point the main branding will be Siemens; not sure how you want 
>>>>>> to 
>>>>>> handle that.
>>>>>
>>>>> We've already done something similar with WaveComp who have rolled up
>>>>> the various mips and imgtec contributions into
>>>>> contrib/gitdm/group-map-wavecomp.
>>>>>
>>>>> It's really up to you and which corporate entity would like internet
>>>>> bragging points. The only Siemens contributor I could find is Jan Kiszka
>>>>> but he has contributed a fair amount ;-)
>>>>
>>>> Given that the Mentor branding is going away (and the "Mentor Graphics" 
>>>> version largely has gone away, "Mentor, a Siemens Business" is what's 
>>>> currently used as a Mentor brand), probably it makes sense to use Siemens 
>>>> for both codesourcery.com and mentor.com addresses.
>>>>
>>>
>>> I think the key question is what this map is used for: Is it supposed to
>>> document the historic status, who was who at the time of contribution?
>>> Or is its purpose to help identifying the copyright holder of a
>>> contribution today?
>>
>> I don't know what others use them for but for me it was just an easy way
>> to get a survey of the companies and individuals involved over the last
>> year (2y, 3y, 5y... etc) of development.
> 
> My personal interest is seeing how the corporate/academic/hobbyist
> contributions are split, and how this evolves over time.
> 
> Since there were entries for some companies, I added more,
> but this is not a requisite and we can drop the patches if
> considered not useful or giving headaches to the contributors.
> 
>> The consolidation of
>> contributions isn't overly distorting IMO. The biggest user is probably
>> the end of year state of the nation surveys wanting to see what impact
>> various organisations are having on a project and consolidation just
>> helps push you up the table a little more.
>>
>> The biggest counter example we have at the moment is RedHat/IBM which
>> AFAICT is because the RedHat guys are treated as a separate business
>> unit with their own unique identity.
>>
>> Either way I don't think it's a major issue - hence it is up to the
>> hackers to make the choice.
> 
> Totally. In this particular case, we could even keep "Codesourcery"
> group separate, similarly to RH/IBM.
> 

If there is a way to express also timeline, then I would keep the
historic contributions separate and account those since the merger
(April 2017) to Siemens. You may even consider adding also the phase
when Codesourcery was owned by Mentor.

Jan

-- 
Siemens AG, T RDA IOT
Corporate Competence Center Embedded Linux

Reply via email to