reporter.apache.org is down

2015-09-21 Thread Dan Haywood
Hi folks,

when I hit https://reporter.apache.org/ I'm just seeing "Loading: NaN%
done".

I have karma ... this worked for me before.

ASF Infra say it isn't their service, but they tell me it was broken,
"probably by sebb", in r1703934 ... "the PMC data table has been deleted".

Thx
Dan


Re: Apache Reporter Service

2015-03-03 Thread Dan Haywood
Nice work, Daniel.

request: could the subscribers graphs be in the order of users, dev,
commits, private?

Thx
Dan



On 3 March 2015 at 12:42, Daniel Gruno humbed...@apache.org wrote:

 Apologies, I was hacking on that chart while you were watching, it should
 be finished now - it's an attempt at least :)

 With regards,
 Daniel.


 On 2015-03-03 13:32, Rob Vesse wrote:

 Setting the fake date didn't seem to do the trick and actually broke the
 mock up release timeline graphic someone already hacked in

 I like the time line somebody already mocked up though it doesn't display
 that nicely in Safari at least.  The other thing I was thinking of was a
 simple graph similar to the mailing list subscriber graphs that just
 graphs number of releases per reporting period

 Rob

 On 03/03/2015 11:51, Daniel Gruno humbed...@apache.org wrote:

  Hi Rob,
 If the release you messed up is within the last 3 months, you can just
 override it with a fake older date and make it go out of view (add the
 release again and set the date to 1970-01-01 for instance). I'll work on
 a smarter editing feature soon.

 Viewing previous release cycles and such would indeed be cool, but I'd
 probably need some sort of mock-up from you to be able to create it -
 I'm not sure how it should be displayed and what info to include. I'm
 not saying you should open up ye olde MS Paint and draw something, but
 some sort of visual idea would be nice.

 With regards,
 Daniel.

 On 2015-03-03 12:44, Rob Vesse wrote:

 Daniel

 This is really cool

 Quick question - how do we correct errors in the release data?  I just
 went through and added all the releases for the PMC of which I am a
 member
 and realised I made a typo in the version number for one of our
 releases.
 Where do I go to correct this?

 Also it would be nice if the web UI would allow you to view all the
 releases and give you average release cadence

 Keep up the great work!

 Thanks,

 Rob

 On 03/03/2015 10:50, Daniel Gruno humbed...@apache.org wrote:

  Hi folks,
 as some of you will have noticed, either by the commits I just made or
 conversations going on elsewhere, I have started work on a new helper
 system for PMCs called the Apache Reporter Service. This is sort of an
 external addition to Whimsy, and shows various statistics and data for
 projects, designed to aid chairs (and other lurkers) in viewing and
 compiling data for board reports.

 The system is now live at: https://reporter.apache.org - you will need
 to be a PMC member of a project to view this site, and you will - in
 general - only be shown data for projects where you are on the PMC.

 The system will show you:
 - Your next report date and the chair of the project
 - PMC and committership changes over the past 3 months, as well as
 latest additions if 3 months ago
 - The latest releases done this quarter (if added by RMs)
 - Mailing list statistics: number of subscribers as well as number of
 emails sent this quarter and the previous
 - JIRA tickets opened/closed this quarter (if correctly mapped within
 the system)
 - A mock-up of a board report, with the above data compiled into it (to
 be edited heavily by the chair!)

 Quick-navigation (hot-links) can be done by using the LDAP name of a
 project in the URL, for instance: https://reporter.apache.org/?apr
 would
 navigate directly to the Apache Portable Runtime project if you are on
 that PMC (or a member of the foundation).

 The report mock-up is meant as a help only, not a canonical template
 for
 board reports. Vital items, such as community activity and board issues
 are intentionally left for the reporter (chair) to fill out, and heaven
 help the woman/man who submits a report with these fields left as
 default ;).

 Later today, I plan to enable the distribution watching part of this
 service, which will send reminders to anyone who pushes a release, that
 they should (not required, but if they want to!) add their release data
 to the system, so as to help others using the system to get an overview
 of the status of any given project.

 I have already gotten a lot of really useful feedback, but if you see
 something you'd like to change, either shoot me an email here on the
 comdev list, or commit a change to the system in svn.

 With regards,
 Daniel.










Re: Apache Reporter Service

2015-03-03 Thread Dan Haywood
cool.  Many thx

Dan


On 3 March 2015 at 13:08, Daniel Gruno humbed...@apache.org wrote:

 Hi Dan,
 I have now made the system prefer those list first on the report in that
 order (and any other lists come later then)

 With regards,
 Daniel.


 On 2015-03-03 13:58, Dan Haywood wrote:

 Nice work, Daniel.

 request: could the subscribers graphs be in the order of users, dev,
 commits, private?

 Thx
 Dan



 On 3 March 2015 at 12:42, Daniel Gruno humbed...@apache.org wrote:

  Apologies, I was hacking on that chart while you were watching, it should
 be finished now - it's an attempt at least :)

 With regards,
 Daniel.


 On 2015-03-03 13:32, Rob Vesse wrote:

  Setting the fake date didn't seem to do the trick and actually broke the
 mock up release timeline graphic someone already hacked in

 I like the time line somebody already mocked up though it doesn't
 display
 that nicely in Safari at least.  The other thing I was thinking of was a
 simple graph similar to the mailing list subscriber graphs that just
 graphs number of releases per reporting period

 Rob

 On 03/03/2015 11:51, Daniel Gruno humbed...@apache.org wrote:

   Hi Rob,

 If the release you messed up is within the last 3 months, you can just
 override it with a fake older date and make it go out of view (add the
 release again and set the date to 1970-01-01 for instance). I'll work
 on
 a smarter editing feature soon.

 Viewing previous release cycles and such would indeed be cool, but I'd
 probably need some sort of mock-up from you to be able to create it -
 I'm not sure how it should be displayed and what info to include. I'm
 not saying you should open up ye olde MS Paint and draw something, but
 some sort of visual idea would be nice.

 With regards,
 Daniel.

 On 2015-03-03 12:44, Rob Vesse wrote:

  Daniel

 This is really cool

 Quick question - how do we correct errors in the release data?  I just
 went through and added all the releases for the PMC of which I am a
 member
 and realised I made a typo in the version number for one of our
 releases.
 Where do I go to correct this?

 Also it would be nice if the web UI would allow you to view all the
 releases and give you average release cadence

 Keep up the great work!

 Thanks,

 Rob

 On 03/03/2015 10:50, Daniel Gruno humbed...@apache.org wrote:

   Hi folks,

 as some of you will have noticed, either by the commits I just made
 or
 conversations going on elsewhere, I have started work on a new helper
 system for PMCs called the Apache Reporter Service. This is sort of
 an
 external addition to Whimsy, and shows various statistics and data
 for
 projects, designed to aid chairs (and other lurkers) in viewing and
 compiling data for board reports.

 The system is now live at: https://reporter.apache.org - you will
 need
 to be a PMC member of a project to view this site, and you will - in
 general - only be shown data for projects where you are on the PMC.

 The system will show you:
 - Your next report date and the chair of the project
 - PMC and committership changes over the past 3 months, as well as
 latest additions if 3 months ago
 - The latest releases done this quarter (if added by RMs)
 - Mailing list statistics: number of subscribers as well as number of
 emails sent this quarter and the previous
 - JIRA tickets opened/closed this quarter (if correctly mapped within
 the system)
 - A mock-up of a board report, with the above data compiled into it
 (to
 be edited heavily by the chair!)

 Quick-navigation (hot-links) can be done by using the LDAP name of a
 project in the URL, for instance: https://reporter.apache.org/?apr
 would
 navigate directly to the Apache Portable Runtime project if you are
 on
 that PMC (or a member of the foundation).

 The report mock-up is meant as a help only, not a canonical template
 for
 board reports. Vital items, such as community activity and board
 issues
 are intentionally left for the reporter (chair) to fill out, and
 heaven
 help the woman/man who submits a report with these fields left as
 default ;).

 Later today, I plan to enable the distribution watching part of this
 service, which will send reminders to anyone who pushes a release,
 that
 they should (not required, but if they want to!) add their release
 data
 to the system, so as to help others using the system to get an
 overview
 of the status of any given project.

 I have already gotten a lot of really useful feedback, but if you see
 something you'd like to change, either shoot me an email here on the
 comdev list, or commit a change to the system in svn.

 With regards,
 Daniel.









Re: Oaths and Anthems (was Re: A maturity model for Apache projects)

2015-01-16 Thread Dan Haywood
On 16 January 2015 at 17:51, Alex Harui aha...@adobe.com wrote:


 Hope you like it.


I like it. A lot.  And laugh-out loud funny (well, I thought, anyway).

I'm imagining everyone attending a barcamp or ApacheCon solemnly standing
up and repeating that oath...

Good job, +1

Dan




 -Alex

 The Committer Oath
 I, _, promise to properly record the licensing and copyright of
 any code I commit, treat all committers equally, use the mailing list for
 communicating with others, only veto code with technical explanations,
 help users, fix bugs, and represent myself and not my employer in my
 actions.


 The PMC Member Oath (assumes you’ve memorized the Committer Oath already).
 I, _, promise to ensure the correct licensing and copyright of the
 content of releases, treat all PMC members and committers equally, seek
 consensus before voting, identify others whose meritorious actions deserve
 inclusion as committers or PMC members, and use the private mailing list
 only for discussions about people,

 - The Laws of Apache -


 Apache Releases:
 -Are free
 -Are PGP-signed
 -On dist.apache.org
 -Approved by majority vote
 -Do not contain compiled code.
 -Contain scripts to compile any source that needs compilation.
 -Contain correct LICENSE and NOTICE files


 Apache Source Code:
 -Is recorded in SVN or Git.
 -Is not on GitHub (that’s a copy).
 -Is available to the public
 -Contains correct headers
 -Is licensed under an approved license
 -Does not depend on external code under certain licenses.


 Apache Binary Packages:
 -make the Release Manager liable
 -contain LICENSE and NOTICE


 The Apache Anthem (to the tune of “My Country Tis of Thee” or “God Save
 the Queen”)

 A-pach-e code for free
 Source zip and tar.gz
 Signed PGP.

 License and Copyright
 NOTICE files in sight.
 3 plus-1 vote majority
 No binary

 Please get those headers right
 Plus how to build it right
 Check dependencies

 Source in Subversion tree
 Or Git Repositry
 On servers in Apa-a-che
 Legal history







Re: where can i suggest a new project for apache to create?

2013-04-24 Thread Dan Haywood
... and in addition, there's the stuff on creating project proposal  [1]

[1] http://incubator.apache.org/guides/proposal.html


On 24 April 2013 14:31, Bertrand Delacretaz bdelacre...@apache.org wrote:

 Hi,

 On Wed, Apr 24, 2013 at 3:28 PM, james pruett gpscru...@gmail.com wrote:
  ...I only saw the GsoC which didn't seem appropriate...

 The right place to look at for new projects is
 http://incubator.apache.org/ - we've started working on
 http://incubator.apache.org/podling-story.html as a narrative guide to
 how that works, that's still incomplete but should help.

 -Bertrand