On 02/15/2012 02:24 PM, Mark Wiebe wrote:
> On Wed, Feb 15, 2012 at 1:36 PM, Matthew Brett <matthew.br...@gmail.com
> <mailto:matthew.br...@gmail.com>> wrote:
>
>     Hi,
>
>     On Wed, Feb 15, 2012 at 12:55 PM, Mark Wiebe <mwwi...@gmail.com
>     <mailto:mwwi...@gmail.com>> wrote:
>      > On Wed, Feb 15, 2012 at 12:09 PM, Matthew Brett
>     <matthew.br...@gmail.com <mailto:matthew.br...@gmail.com>>
>      > wrote:
>      >>
>      >> Hi,
>      >>
>      >> On Wed, Feb 15, 2012 at 11:46 AM, Benjamin Root <ben.r...@ou.edu
>     <mailto:ben.r...@ou.edu>> wrote:
>      >> >
>      >> >
>      >> > On Wed, Feb 15, 2012 at 1:32 PM, Alan G Isaac
>     <alan.is...@gmail.com <mailto:alan.is...@gmail.com>>
>      >> > wrote:
>      >> >> Can you provide an example where a more formal
>      >> >> governance structure for NumPy would have meant
>      >> >> more or better code development? (Please do not
>      >> >> suggest the NA discussion!)
>      >> >>
>      >> >
>      >> > Why not the NA discussion?  Would we really want to have that
>     happen
>      >> > again?
>      >> > Note that it still isn't fully resolved and progress still
>     needs to be
>      >> > made
>      >> > (I think the last thread did an excellent job of fleshing out
>     the ideas,
>      >> > but
>      >> > it became too much to digest.  We may need to have someone go
>     through
>      >> > the
>      >> > information, reduce it down and make one last push to bring it
>     to a
>      >> > conclusion).  The NA discussion is the perfect example where a
>      >> > governance
>      >> > structure would help resolve disputes.
>      >>
>      >> Yes, that was the most obvious example. I don't know about you,
>     but I
>      >> can't see any sign of that one being resolved.
>      >>
>      >> The other obvious example was the dispute about ABI breakage for
>     numpy
>      >> 1.5.0 where I believe Travis did invoke some sort of committee to
>      >> vote, but (Travis can correct me if I'm wrong), the committee was
>      >> named ad-hoc and contacted off-list.
>      >>
>      >> >
>      >> >>
>      >> >> Can you provide an example of what you might
>      >> >> envision as a "more formal governance structure"?
>      >> >> (I assume that any such structure will not put people
>      >> >> who are not core contributors to NumPy in a position
>      >> >> to tell core contributors what to spend their time on.)
>      >> >>
>      >> >> Early last December, Chuck Harris estimated that three
>      >> >> people were active NumPy developers.  I liked the idea of
>      >> >> creating a "board" of these 3 and a rule that says any
>      >> >> active developer can request to join the board, that
>      >> >> additions are determined by majority vote of the existing
>      >> >> board, and  that having the board both small and odd
>      >> >> numbered is a priority.  I also suggested inviting to this
>      >> >> board a developer or two from important projects that are
>      >> >> very NumPy dependent (e.g., Matplotlib).
>      >> >>
>      >> >> I still like this idea.  Would it fully satisfy you?
>      >> >>
>      >> >
>      >> > I actually like that idea.  Matthew, is this along the lines
>     of what you
>      >> > were thinking?
>      >>
>      >> Honestly it would make me very happy if the discussion moved to what
>      >> form the governance should take.  I would have thought that 3
>     was too
>      >> small a number.
>      >
>      >
>      > One thing to note about this point is that during the NA
>     discussion, the
>      > only people doing active C-level development were Charles and me.
>     I suspect
>      > a discussion about how to recruit more people into that group
>     might be more
>      > important than governance at this point in time.
>
>     Mark - a) thanks for replying, it's good to hear your voice and b) I
>     don't think there's any competition between the discussion about
>     governance and the need to recruit more people into the group who
>     understand the C code.
>
>
> There hasn't really been any discussion about recruiting developers to
> compete with the governance topic, now we can let the topics compete. :)
>
> Some of the mechanisms which will help are already being set in motion
> through the discussion about better infrastructure support like bug
> trackers and continuous integration. The forthcoming roadmap discussion
> Travis alluded to, where we will propose a roadmap for review by the
> numpy user community, will include many more such points.
>
>     Remember we are deciding here between governance - of a form to be
>     decided - and no governance - which I think is the current situation.
>     I know your desire is to see more people contributing to the C code.
>     It would help a lot if you could say what you think the barriers are,
>     how they could be lowered, and the risks that you see as a result of
>     the numpy C expertise moving essentially into one company.  Then we
>     can formulate some governance that would help lower those barriers and
>     reduce those risks.
>
>
> There certainly is governance now, it's just informal. It's a
> combination of how the design discussions are carried out, how pull
> requests occur, and who has commit rights.

+1

If non-contributing users came along on the Cython list demanding that 
we set up a system to select non-developers along on a board that would 
have discussions in order to veto pull requests, I don't know whether 
we'd ignore it or ridicule it or try to show some patience, but we 
certainly wouldn't take it seriously.

It's obvious that one should try for consensus as long as possible, 
including listening to users. But in the very end, when agreement can't 
be reached by other means, the developers are the one making the calls.
(This is simply a consequence that they are the only ones who can 
credibly threaten to fork the project.)

Sure, structures that includes users in the process could be useful... 
but, if the devs are fine with the current situation (and I don't see 
Mark or Charles complaining), then I honestly think it is quite rude to 
not let the matter drop after the first ten posts or so.

Making things the way one wants it and scratching *ones own* itch is THE 
engine of open source development (whether one is putting in spare time 
or monetary funding). Trying to work against that with artificial 
structures doesn't sound wise for a project with as few devs as NumPy...

Dag
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