2018-06-14 0:26 GMT+02:00 Berker Peksağ <berker.pek...@gmail.com>: > I don't care about total number of commits to be honest. It's not so > hard to get 50 PRs merged into master in a month or so.
Wait, what? No developer got more than 50 commits merged into master in less than one month. Stats between May, 1st and today (one month and a half, longer than one month), top 5 --- 39 Serhiy Storchaka <storch...@gmail.com> 31 Victor Stinner <vstin...@redhat.com> 24 Yury Selivanov <y...@magic.io> 18 Andrés Delfino <adelf...@gmail.com> 16 Ned Deily <n...@python.org> --- Statistics on the master branch between September 1st, 2017 and today, developers with at least 20 commits: --- 221 Serhiy Storchaka 221 Victor Stinner 89 Yury Selivanov 67 Ned Deily 60 Benjamin Peterson 56 Terry Jan Reedy 51 Christian Heimes 41 Eric V. Smith 41 INADA Naoki 37 Antoine Pitrou 36 Raymond Hettinger 35 Steve Dower 34 Cheryl Sabella 34 Andrew Svetlov 31 Oren Milman 29 Barry Warsaw 26 xdegaye 24 Andrés Delfino 22 Eric Snow 21 Pablo Galindo 20 Berker Peksag --- But if you ignore core developers, here is the top 6 most active contributors: --- 34 Cheryl Sabella 31 Oren Milman 24 Andrés Delfino 21 Pablo Galindo 18 Zackery Spytz 9 Paul Ganssle --- I let you look at each commit to estimate how much time each contributor has spent on Python. Note: Oh, it seems like Pablo got one commit as a different name but with same email ("Author: Dargor <pablog...@gmail.com>"). The correct number for Pablo is 22. Note2: Pablo got 2 more commits merged into master (22) than Berker (20) ;-) > [1] According to bpo, Pablo has been active in 38 issues: It seems that he is active, if not very active, on the bug tracker, no? But how can I compare this number to other core developers or other contributors? > Writing high quality code is not the only requirement to become a core > developer. > IMO, being active on bugs.p.o [1] and reviewing pull requests on > GitHub [2] are more important than writing code or documentation. I'm not sure that it works in this direction. I expect that once a developer is promoted as a core dev, they become more active on reviews and bug triage. It's my (personal) definition of the additional responsibilities of a core developer. I don't see why a contributor will spend time on reviews and bug triage before becoming a core. Writing pull requests is a good way to learn how to produce good reviews. There are 90 core developers in the GitHub team: how many of them are regularly doing reviews and bug triage? Don't expect that a new core developer will be at least as active, if not more, than existing core developers. I'm happy if I review 5 pull requests per week. It takes a lot of time to review properly a PR. As I wrote to Serhiy, IMHO you are putting the bar too high. Our role is to mentor and guide contributors to make them feel part of a team and feel useful by recognizing the value of their work. Please remind that they are very few contributors with available free time and ready to be invested in the long term. In my experience, naturally, when a contributor is promoted, they become more active in different areas of Python: bug tracker, mailing list, devguide, etc. My script to compute stats: --- import collections import subprocess proc = subprocess.run(['git', 'log', '--after=2017-09-01', 'master'], stdout=subprocess.PIPE, universal_newlines=True) authors = collections.Counter() for line in proc.stdout.splitlines(): if line.startswith('Author: '): line = line[8:] name = line.split(' <')[0] authors[name] += 1 for name, commits in authors.most_common(): if commits < 5: break print(commits, name) --- Victor _______________________________________________ python-committers mailing list python-committers@python.org https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-committers Code of Conduct: https://www.python.org/psf/codeofconduct/