We actually discussed this quite a while ago and decided it was okay to
move cmislib to git. However, upon looking at it, I realized that the only
difference was going to be the command line tool developers used. It was
not going to make the project available on github (beyond what is already
On Fri, Oct 20, 2017 at 11:07 AM, Nick Burch wrote:
> On Fri, 20 Oct 2017, Florian Müller wrote:
>
>> I like the idea of moving all Apache Chemistry projects to Git. It's some
>> work, though. Someone has to drive it...
>>
>
> I think you already have github mirrors for all
On Fri, 20 Oct 2017, Florian Müller wrote:
I like the idea of moving all Apache Chemistry projects to Git. It's
some work, though. Someone has to drive it...
I think you already have github mirrors for all of them!
https://github.com/apache?utf8=%E2%9C%93=chemistry==
(If there's any missing
On Fri, 20 Oct 2017, Laurent Mignon wrote:
In discussions with Jeff and Florian on this topic, Florian mentioned that
the ASF now offers a tool for integrating projects with Github. (
https://gitbox.apache.org/)
There's already a read-only mirror of cmislib (and the other Chemistry
projects)
I like the idea of moving all Apache Chemistry projects to Git.
It's some work, though. Someone has to drive it...
- Florian
+1 from me, although I don't contribute to cmislib, and as a matter of
fact
I would also support moving the Java chemistry codebase to git.
Florent
On Fri, Oct 20,
+1 from me, although I don't contribute to cmislib, and as a matter of fact
I would also support moving the Java chemistry codebase to git.
Florent
On Fri, Oct 20, 2017 at 9:31 AM, Laurent Mignon wrote:
> Hi,
>
> As a new committer I confess that it is not easy to find the
Hi,
As a new committer I confess that it is not easy to find the process to
follow to propose new improvements or bug fix to chemistry-cmislib and to
allow the code review by others.
In recent years, tools such as gitlab, github, bitbucket,... have emerged
and all propose a simple way to