On 08/06/2012 07:12 AM, Hyrum K Wright wrote:
On Wed, Jul 25, 2012 at 1:18 PM, Gary Martin <[email protected]> wrote:
Hi everyone,
I hope that this is not premature but as the conversation on the related
[PROPOSAL] thread has died down, I would like to initiate the vote for
releasing Apache Bloodhound 0.1.0 (incubating). If successful this will be
the first release of the project and is an important step that I hope will
generate interest in the project and help the community to grow.
The release candidate this vote relates to provides:
* A patched version of Trac
* A new dashboard view with the dashboard style unifying views of
tickets, milestones and the user's dashboard.
* A re-theming of the interface to use bootstrap
* Preliminary multi-product support as a step towards allowing the
tracking of multiple distinct products (or projects) in a single
environment
* Simplified installation with the inclusion of a number of plugins as
standard.
As an initial release, of particular importance is that we have taken proper
notice of licensing of code produced as part of this project and the proper
acknowledgement of external work packaged with it.
The release candidate artifacts consist of source release as a tar.gz
archive along with the associated MD5 and GPG signature. These can be found
at: https://dist.apache.org/repos/dist/dev/incubator/bloodhound/
Please vote:
[ ] +1 Release this package as Apache Bloodhound 0.1.0
[ ] +0 Don't care
[ ] -1 Do not release this package (please explain)
The vote is open for 72 hours and, if successful, will be followed by a vote
on general@incubator for a further 72 hours.
I know I'm late to the party, but +1 (binding).
I have not evaluated the technical content of the tarball, but have
looked to ensure it complies with ASF policies. (Aside: it would be
nice to have an appropriate excludes file for the RAT tool, but that
shouldn't hold up this release.)
Good work and congrats!
Your absentee mentor,
-Hyrum
Thanks for that. I will look into it.
By the way, are there any alternatives to RAT? Perhaps it does not make
so much sense to maintain multiple tools for the same purpose but, at
the same time, it seems a bit of overkill for a project that uses
neither Maven or Java for anything else.
Well, just wondering really.
Cheers,
Gary