Hello,

I would like to keep the status quo in this. We don’t have formal maintainers 
and basically every change to the package/component is reviewed by relevant 
person (me/alp/aurelien//jimklimov/wacki/agnar). I would really like to see 
this list to grow and reach the phase that we need to start think about 
maintainers, but we are not yet there. The situation right now is that even if 
a person reviews the change and think that other person should have a look, 
e.g. me when I am reviewing some libs that might affect GUI i ask alp for 
crossreview or when alp touches X11 things, he ask aurelien etc.

I would avoid creating a dedicated maintainers for now. If people really think 
it should be done, I would say it should be done on a technology stacks, e.g. 
Python, Ruby, webservers, X11, databases etc. In such cases every change would 
need to be approved by a relevant person. However, I think that might introduce 
latency and bureaucracy, which is really non-existent right now. I would like 
to keep it that way if possible.

Cheers,
Adam

> On May 11, 2017, at 9:13 PM, Peter Tribble <peter.trib...@gmail.com> wrote:
> 
> On Thu, May 11, 2017 at 6:56 PM, Aurélien Larcher <aurelien.larc...@gmail.com 
> <mailto:aurelien.larc...@gmail.com>> wrote:
> 
> The question raised is whether we should formalize a maintaining process for 
> some important components or groups of components.
> 
> At some point I joked about a campaign going like "Adopt a package".
> 
> There are downsides to having a formal owner: they can become a
> bottleneck, and it might discourage others to contribute in an area
> where there's an individual (or individuals) listed. Also, people may be
> reluctant to contribute if there's a prospect of being lumbered with
> the responsibility going forward.
> 
> But, if you can avoid that, then there are benefits to having what we
> would call "Subject Matter Experts" for components or groups. Having
> someone who is reasonably familiar with the component, preferably
> someone who uses it, is useful as a source of help and advice, and
> having a list of such people and their specialities would be useful to
> other contributors.
> 
> Putting such a list on display would also show that OI wasn't just a
> one or two person effort, which would be good.
> 
> --
> -Peter Tribble
> http://www.petertribble.co.uk/ <http://www.petertribble.co.uk/> - 
> http://ptribble.blogspot.com/ 
> <http://ptribble.blogspot.com/>_______________________________________________
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