Andy - That’s a good point. What I had in my mind was sort of like this ....

- After 30 days alert is sent to author if no activity/comment not just 
commits.They would still have something like a week
- If code is complicated they don’t have to finish it just simply comment on PR 
to stop it from being closed
- I like this because when they comment they can say things like. “Sorry this 
is taking longer because of problem XYZ I’m having” others in the community can 
see this and offer input so it helps on collaboration
- This also helps people watching the PRs and interested in using them have a 
much more clear and accurate understanding of where the PR actually stands 
progress wise so they can more accurately determine when it will be available 
to them
- To your last point, which is a good one, they would simply comment with a 
gentle reminder that they would like for someone to review.

Thoughts? I’m sure I’m missing something there but that’s sort of how I imagine 
it working

- Jeremy Dyer

Thanks - Jeremy Dyer

________________________________
From: Andy LoPresto <alopresto.apa...@gmail.com>
Sent: Saturday, September 15, 2018 11:57 AM
To: dev@nifi.apache.org
Subject: Re: [DISCUSS] Stale PRs

Jeremy,

What about in the scenario where the submitter does everything and we (the 
committers) are slow? I’m not saying we shouldn’t try to fix all the problems, 
just that I see a lot more of the latter happening.

Andy LoPresto
alopre...@apache.org
alopresto.apa...@gmail.com
PGP Fingerprint: 70EC B3E5 98A6 5A3F D3C4 BACE 3C6E F65B 2F7D EF69

> On Sep 15, 2018, at 08:51, Pierre Villard <pierre.villard...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> Andy,
>
> Totally get your points. I imagine that introducing this approach would
> help keeping dynamic exchanges on pull requests.
>
> In case a PR needs complex/time consuming work (or in case the author is
> just not in a position to process comments), I think we could have two
> approaches:
> - the PR is considered stale after 60 days but is actually closed one week
> later. I think it leaves time for someone (ideally the author) to comment
> and give an update so that the PR is not considered stale anymore, no?
> - for important PRs, it's possible to "remove" this mechanism using
> specific labels but I guess we would have to ask ASF infra if we want to
> have rights to add labels on PRs (?)
>
> Pierre
>
>
>
>
> Le sam. 15 sept. 2018 à 17:44, Andy LoPresto <alopresto.apa...@gmail.com> a
> écrit :
>
>> Pierre,
>>
>> I’m going to delay my response on that proposal while I ask for (aka
>> should gather on my own) some information. Is that really our problem? By
>> that, I mean are stale PRs where we are getting bogged down? I am sure
>> there are some old ones that should be closed out. My larger concern is
>> that even new PRs don’t get reviewed immediately for a number of reasons.
>>
>> 1. Balance of committers to submissions. As the project continues to grow,
>> we have far more people providing code than can review it.
>> 2. Quality of PR. Not that the code is necessarily bad, but the PR doesn’t
>> clearly explain the problem and how they are solving it, provide test
>> cases, provide templates or a Docker container if interacting with an
>> external service, etc. All of these things add up to make the cost of
>> reviewing higher.
>> 3. What PRs cover. Previously, there was still a lot of low-hanging fruit,
>> and less complexity. While the project is still fairly cleanly organized,
>> many PRs now are less “add this simple functionality” and more “improve
>> this complicated feature.”
>>
>> I guess I would not have a problem with your proposal, but I do wonder if
>> there are more effective ways to reduce the backlog by identifying other
>> areas of improvement.
>>
>> Andy LoPresto
>> alopre...@apache.org
>> alopresto.apa...@gmail.com
>> PGP Fingerprint: 70EC B3E5 98A6 5A3F D3C4 BACE 3C6E F65B 2F7D EF69
>>
>>> On Sep 15, 2018, at 08:33, Pierre Villard <pierre.villard...@gmail.com>
>> wrote:
>>>
>>> Hi,
>>>
>>> The number of open PRs is still growing and it could make think people
>> that
>>> the project is not healthy/active (even though a quick look at the last
>>> commit date or the commits rate is a clear indication that the project is
>>> healthy).
>>>
>>> In order to encourage people to review code and keep active discussions
>> on
>>> the PRs, I suggest to find a way to keep this number as small as
>> possible.
>>> To do so, I'd like to ask the wider community if the approach taken by a
>>> project like Apache Beam would be a good idea:
>>>
>>> "A pull request becomes stale after its author fails to respond to
>>> actionable comments for 60 days. Author of a closed pull request is
>> welcome
>>> to reopen the same pull request again in the future."
>>>
>>> This approach is managed by a file [1] in the .github directory of the
>>> repository.
>>>
>>> What do you think about this approach?
>>>
>>> [1] https://github.com/apache/beam/blob/master/.github/stale.yml
>>>
>>> Pierre
>>

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