On Mon, Jan 26, 2009 at 11:40 PM, Allan McRae <allan@archlinux.org> wrote:
So your point is what exactly and how does it relate to the topic at hand?
Allan
It relates because of kludge's question of "what mechanism exists for users to suggest/cheer on a package's promotion to [extra]?" and Greg's response of "Its called pkgstats." and Loui's suggestion of doing a cleanup based on pkgstats/votes before this transition: On Mon, Jan 26, 2009 at 2:26 PM, Loui Chang <louipc.ist@gmail.com> wrote:
It seems the consensus is to remove community packages from the AUR interface altogether.
Before we do that though we should do a general package clean up. Moving packages with extremely low votes/pkgstats usage into unsupported, so we're not importing garbage into the new system.
What do you think?
You're asking for people's suggestions on how to proceed with this transition, and I'm merely pointing out that some of the proposed implementation details might not be in the best interest for Arch users...or more accurately, there's no way to tell if they are or not. Yet, we keep pushing forward to change things regardless and basing decisions on the same false pretenses. I think kludge's question is completely valid, and combining these tools does blur the line on management policies and how extra/community have worked in the past. Dismissing that concern by saying there's nothing we can do about losing votes and we'll just rely on pkgstats might not be the best solution. So my concerns about pkgstats (and votes) may not be an implementation detail, per se, but it is absolutely related. -- Aaron "ElasticDog" Schaefer