Re: New procedure for proposed modules
- From: Andrew Sobala <aes gnome org>
- To: gnome-hackers gnome org
- Subject: Re: New procedure for proposed modules
- Date: Mon, 03 Apr 2006 20:04:03 +0100
Vincent Untz wrote:
Hi all,
The GNOME Release Team, after some discussion, has come up with a new
procedure for getting modules accepted into the next release of GNOME.
It is our hope that the new procedure will lead to less confusion. This
is more of a tweak than an overhaul, taking into account lessons learned
from the past.
As I understand it, this implicitly makes module inclusion slightly
different for applications and libraries. A question to ask if I've
understood this correctly:
If you're an application, then you get your module synchronised with the
release cycle by 2.15.1. If you're crackful, the community should voice
dissent straight away; if it doesn't, then you're accepted. By 2.15.4,
you can only be vetoed for technical reasons (ie. those in GEP 10).
If you're a framework (library, "su"-framework, etc.) , then the above
applies, but you should get yourself used by other modules. By 2.15.4,
you could be vetoed for technical reasons (GEP 10), but in general if
you have widespread adoption by maintainers then that is a de-facto
acceptance by the community. On the other hand, if you haven't got
yourself used by other modules, it begins to look like the
service-as-implemented isn't really wanted in GNOME.
To summarise, the community makes an initial decision on applications
and libaries straight away, but libraries also have to prove themselves
as useful in-the-wild.
Is that correct, or have I got the wrong end of the stick?
Yours,
Andrew
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