I think it's possible to get 90% of the functionality that most of us
(or at least I) want without the distributed stuff. If that's 10% of
the effort, would be really nice to have the auto-merging type of
functionality at least.
If the "maintainer" heirarchy was a strict tree structure, where you
send patches to your parent, and receive them from your children, that
doesn't seem to need anything particularly fancy to me.
Personally, I just collect together patches mainly from IBM people here,
test them for functionality and performance, and sync up with Linus every
new release by reapplying them on top of the new tree, and fix the conflicts
by hand. Then I just email the patches as flat diffs to Linus. If I could
get some really basic auto-merge functionality, that would get rid of 90%
of the work, even if it only worked 95% of the time, and showed me what
it had done that patch couldn't have done by itself. I don't see why that
requires all this distributed stuff. If I resync with the latest -bk
snapshot just before I send, the chances of Linus having to do much merge
work is pretty small.
I'm sure Bitkeeper is better than that, and has all sorts of fancy features,
and perhaps Linus even uses some of them. But if I can get 90% of that for
10% of the effort, I'd be happy. Some way to pass Linus some basic metadata
like changelog comments would be good (at the moment, I just slap those atop
the patch, and he edits them, but a basic perl script could hack off a
"comment to Linus" section from a "changelog section", which might save
Linus some editing).
Andrew and Alan seem to work pretty well with flat patches too - Larry
seemed to imply that he thought the merge part of the problem was easy
enough in a non-distributed system ... if anything existant has or could
have that without the distributed stuff and the complexity, would be cool.
If I'm missing something fundamental here, it wouldn't suprise me ;-)
M.
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