[Zope-dev] DISCUSS: Moving CVS repository

Loren Stafford lstaffor@dynalogic.com
Thu, 24 Feb 2000 17:38:16 -0800


Perhaps you could work with SourceForge to develop an effective co-branding
strategy.

SourceForge's GUI is very rigid. If they could make it more flexible so that
it could adapt to the needs of the featured products as well as to the needs
of the user, then the transition between Zope main site and the
Zope/SourceForge site could be made less abrupt. For exampe, if I go from
the Zope main site to Zope/SourceForge, I'm probably a Zope developer;
therefore I would appreciate having the navigation around the content begin
to reflect my needs as a Zope developer -- namely, Python documentation,
Python debugging tools, WWW specifications, related Zope resources,
databases, etc.

-- Loren

----- Original Message -----
From: Paul Everitt <paul@digicool.com>
To: <zope-dev@zope.org>
Sent: February 24, 2000 03:23 PM
Subject: [Zope-dev] DISCUSS: Moving CVS repository


>
> At IPC8, I asked what we could do to better "work in a fishbowl".  One
> of the suggestions was to break the code into modules, which could
> selectively include outside developers.
>
> I have a decision point that I'd like your reaction on related to
> this:
>
> "Should Digital Creations move the Zope CVS repository to SourceForge?"
>
> Background: We do CVS by rdist-ing an internal repository to
> cvs.zope.org for most projects.  Things like PTK have write access by
> external people, but can't do branches as long as the repository
> housekeeping files are inside Digital Creations.  More importantly, we
> find we can't devote the time necessary to staying ahead of CVS, SSH,
> etc.
>
> A proposal has been floated here to move our repository to a facility
> such as SourceForge.
> We would also use it as an opportunity to break the Zope code into
> separately-released packages such as zope-dtml, zope-zodb, etc.  The
> mailing lists might be re-organized accordingly.  At select points we
> might
> wrap everything together as a Zope release.
>
> There are strong benefits.  Sites like Sourceforge are on a fast link,
> presumably
> with fast machines behind it.  They have a system where people can get
> their SSH accounts setup and module owners can include developers, all
> without a sysadmin getting involved.
>
> The major discussed downside is brand.  We'd be turning part of our
> developer
> community brand over to another entity.  Some have argued that this
> would reflect poorly.
>
> Let me know what you think, both pros and cons.
>
> --Paul
>
> _______________________________________________
> Zope-Dev maillist  -  Zope-Dev@zope.org
> http://lists.zope.org/mailman/listinfo/zope-dev
> **  No cross posts or HTML encoding!  **
> (Related lists -
>  http://lists.zope.org/mailman/listinfo/zope-announce
>  http://lists.zope.org/mailman/listinfo/zope )
>