He has submitted Jira patches in the past and this one will be submitted as well.
I was under the impression that Jira patches did not need CLAs filed. Isn't the process supposed to be that people file patches and we patch them into the repository? Michael Mikhaylov has submitted patches for: XAP-314 XAP-333 XAP-318 Carlos Sanchez recently submitted a Maven patch that I or someone else will hopefully take a look at and commit soon. Have you heard of Carlos Sanchez before? I haven't but I appreciate the work that he did. More up-front communication about what people are working on would be good but I don't see why the lack of that would rule out patching in the code that they wrote and submitted to Jira. If I have some fundamental misunderstanding of how this works please let me know, but I thought that Jira contributors did not need CLAs filed. James M -----Original Message----- From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Martin Cooper Sent: Wednesday, March 21, 2007 6:53 PM To: [email protected] Subject: Re: Optmizations On 3/21/07, James Margaris <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > Tonight I am going to check in some optimizations that Michael > Mikhaylov and I have been working on. (95% Michael, 5% me) Since 95% of this is coming from someone else, and he's not a committer, we're going to need him to file a CLA first. Please have him fax one in, and hold off on your commit until it has been received by the ASF secretary. Who is this Michael Mikhaylov? I haven't seen his name in relation to XAP anywhere before. If he's working on XAP, he should be on the lists, and we should be seeing the discussions of the work he's doing right here on the xap-dev list. Remember, this is a community project, not a stealth development with a public face. -- Martin Cooper These optimizations are > geared around reducing startup time. The main optimization involves > some changes to our use of dojo.connectEvent - calling it less > frequently and changing the connect code itself a bit as well. > > Recently Michael Turyn checked in dojo 0.4, which also makes some > performance improvements as well as fixing the behavior of some > components. For example the tabbed pane response time is now a lot > snappier when clicking on various tabs, and some operations like > scrolling a large table inside of a tabbed pane are an order of > magnitude faster. > > So hopefully people will start seeing a fairly significant speedup. > > James Margaris >
