Re: [aur-general] Proposed rules for packages entering [community]
On Mon, Dec 01, 2008 at 01:27:33PM +1000, Allan McRae wrote:
Hi all,
As part of the TU meetings it was decided to post the proposal for restricting packages entering [community] here for discussion before voting. Here is the current wording:
[proposal]
* Only "popular" packages may enter the repo, as defined by 1% usage from pkgstats or 10 votes on the AUR.
* Automatic exceptions to this rule are: - i18n packages - accessibility packages - drivers - dependencies, including makedeps and optdeps - packages that are part of a collection and are intended to be distributed together, provided the primary part of this collection satisfies the definition of popular
* Any additions not covered by the above criteria must first be proposed on the aur-general mailing list, explaining the reason for the exemption (e.g. renamed package, new package) at which point a general consensus from the TUs will be reached. TUs with large numbers of "non-popular" packages are more likely to be rejected.
* TUs are strongly encouraged to move packages they currently maintain from [community] if they have low usage. No enforcement will be made, although resigning TUs packages may be filtered before adoption can occur.
[end proposal]
Thank you for taking the initiative to put this forward Allan. I really think we've had enough discussion about this topic. Nevertheless the motion requires a set discussion period and voting period. How about five days discussion, and five days voting? Cheers!
On Mon, Dec 1, 2008 at 05:52, Loui Chang <louipc.ist@gmail.com> wrote:
Thank you for taking the initiative to put this forward Allan. I really think we've had enough discussion about this topic. Nevertheless the motion requires a set discussion period and voting period.
How about five days discussion, and five days voting?
I think we also need to discuss the vote procedure. Even if totally dislike the general idea, if the 10 votes/1% rule went to something "easier", It would be a lot easier for me to accept it. But maybe that this new rule will cause many more votes... Anyway, I still quite don't get where the problem is with "non-popular" packages in [community], and how this measure would really be helpful compared to many others. I won't repeat myself any longer, please refer to IRC logs :) -- Geoffroy Carrier
participants (2)
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Geoffroy Carrier
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Loui Chang