This page will track the tasks and schedule around the migration of the Sakai code from SVN to github:
https://github.com/sakaiproject
Decisions agreed upon
Item | Outcome | Date |
---|---|---|
Using github (not any other form of git/repo etc) | ||
Continue using JIRA for issue tracking and turn off the github issue tracker to prevent confusion |
Tasks
- Flatten externals
- Is it worth shuffling the code around completely, ie an API directory, tools directory, etc.
- Jenkins builds need to be switched to
Issues
- SVN will need to be syncronised with git commits for the branches for as long as they are supported. Yes/no? We could just move the tags too.
- syncing would make it easier for merging into branches (less impact on existing users)
- Moving msub will be difficult without long timeframe to allow institutions to migrate themselves and upskill.
- guide to moving
- people should be able to migrate on their own schedule
- msub and the svn sync would likely need to be kept running until 10.x is no longer supported, so at least until 2016
- What do we do about contrib?
- People move their own tools where they want?
- Create a new contrib repo and bundle the tools inside there? Its not all tools though.
- Potentially give people advance warning then just switch it off. Possibly the same time frame as for msub (June 30 2016?)
- Create a separate github repo for each contrib tool?
- devise a simple workflow to integrate those repos with the "normal" build
- What do to about pull requests/patches?
- Even if we continue to use jira, I'm guessing we'd take patches going forward as part of the github pull request system
- Do we attempt to migrate all contributed patches that currently exist in Sakai over to here (there are hundreds), leave them as-is or just close those tickets with a comment that they should be a pull request?
Commit procedure
- Everything handled by local forks and pull requests, core team responsible for reviewing and merging PRs.
- The core team reviews many patches every week and instead of a patch file this would now be PR's.
- It should not be common practice to merge your own PR's
- There are situations where this would be fine
- Release process as this does updates to poms
- possibly Tool Maintainers?
- Kernel should always be reviewed with the exception of releasing.
- There are situations where this would be fine
- See Jasig page on git workflow for committers and non committers.
- What about i18n updates? Ideally it would be easier than staging a pull request.
Volunteers
- Former user (Deleted)
- Former user (Deleted)
- Matthew Jones