Re: [PROPOSAL] accept Easyant for incubation
On 2011-01-18, Antoine Levy-Lambert wrote: I am going to be a mentor of EasyAnt. I am looking for other people willing to volunteer for that too. Count me in. I've added my name to the proposal page on the Wiki as well. Stefan - To unsubscribe, e-mail: general-unsubscr...@incubator.apache.org For additional commands, e-mail: general-h...@incubator.apache.org
Re: [PROPOSAL] accept Easyant for incubation
On 1/20/2011 5:58 AM, Stefan Bodewig wrote: Count me in. I've added my name to the proposal page on the Wiki as well. Thanks, this is great news. Regards, Antoine Stefan - To unsubscribe, e-mail: general-unsubscr...@incubator.apache.org For additional commands, e-mail: general-h...@incubator.apache.org
Re: [PROPOSAL] accept Easyant for incubation
Hi Marcel, EasyAnt already provide a plugin using Bnd to make osgi-bundle. The plugin is really simple but can acts as basis to make bundles in future. We plans to use Apache Sigil or Osgi resolvers provided in ivy (ex Bushel) in a near future. Any feedback would be really appreciated. Cheers, 2011/1/17 Marcel Offermans marcel.offerm...@luminis.nl Hello Antoine, For me it's non-controversial. I'd love to see something like this, but I'm probably not going to be able to spend a lot of time contributing to it. Maybe some OSGi specific parts, especially if we can somehow integrate them with Bnd and BndTools. Greetings, Marcel On Jan 17, 2011, at 22:25 , Antoine Levy-Lambert wrote: Hi, We got no answer concerning Easyant. Does this mean that the proposal is non-controversial and that we should move on to a vote ? Regards, Antoine On 1/11/2011 12:28 PM, Antoine Levy-Lambert wrote: Hello all, We'd like to propose Easyant for entry into the ASF incubator. Easyant is providing a solution for projects who want to use Ant and Ivy with a lot of ready-made templates, with the option to customize. The draft proposal is available at : http://easyant.org/projects/easyant/wiki/ApacheProposal The Ant project has voted to sponsor the entry of Easyant at the Incubator [1]. For your convenience I have pasted this proposal below the email. Regards, Antoine [1] http://mail-archives.apache.org/mod_mbox/ant-dev/201101.mbox/%3c3a73c5da-e4a2-4cb6-8423-0a985246f...@hibnet.org%3E h1. EasyAnt Proposal The following presents the proposal for creating a new EasyAnt project within the Apache Software Foundation. h2. Abstract Easyant is a build system based on Apache Ant and Apache Ivy. h2. Proposal EasyAnt goals are : * to leverage popularity and flexibility of Ant. * to integrate Apache Ivy, such that the build system combines a ready-to-use dependency manager. * to simplify standard build types, such as building web applications, JARs etc, by providing ready to use builds. * to provide conventions and guidelines. * to make plugging-in of fresh functionalities easy as writing simple Ant scripts as Easyant plugins. To still remain adaptable, * Though Easyant comes with a lot of conventions, we never lock you in. * Easyant allows you to easily extend existing modules or create and use your own modules. * Easyant makes migration from Ant very simple. Your legacy Ant scripts could still be leveraged with Easyant. h2. Rationale On the Ivy and Ant mailing list, an often asked question is Why Ivy is not shipped with Ant ?. Ant users (and some opponents) complains also about the bootstrapping of an Ant based build system: it is mainly about copying an existing one. EasyAnt is intended to response to both of these requirements: a prepackaged Ant + Ivy solution with standard build script ready to be used. Also taking inspiration from the success of Apache Maven, EasyAnt is adopting the convention over configuration principle. Then it could be easy to build standard project at least for all commons steps (no more need to reinvent the wheel between each projects). The common part should be easy enough to tune parameters without having deep ant knowledge (example changing the default directory of sources, force compilation to be java 1.4 compatible, etc...). Last but not least, EasyAnt is intended to provide a plugin based architecture to make it easy to contribute on a specific step of the build. Build plugins are pieces of functionality that can be plugged into or removed from a project. Plugins could actually perform a piece of your regular build, e.g. compile java classes during build of a complete war. Or, do a utility action, e.g. deploy your built web application onto a packaged Jetty server! h2. Current Status h3. Meritocracy Some of the core developers are already committers and members of the Apache Ant PMC, so they understand what it means to have a process based on meritocracy. h3. Community EasyAnt have a really small community (around 100 downloads per release). It is not a problem as the team is currently making restructuring changes. The team plans to make more promotion after those changes and strongly believe that community is the priority as the tool is designed to be easy to use. h3. Core Developers Xavier Hanin and Nicolas Lalev™ée are members of the PMC of Apache Ant. Jerome Benois is an Acceleo committer, he was a committer in Eclipse MDT Papyrus for two years and he's an active contributor in Eclipse Modeling and Model Driven community. He's a committer on Bushel project now contribute to the Ivy code base. He leads the EasyAnt for Eclipse plugin development. Jason Trump is leading Beet project on sourceforge ( http://beet.sourceforge.net/). Jean-Louis Boudart is Hudson committer. h3.
Re: [PROPOSAL] accept Easyant for incubation
On 1/17/2011 5:21 PM, Bertrand Delacretaz wrote: Hi Antoine, You'll need more than one mentor for that, and please move the proposal to http://wiki.apache.org/incubator as well. Proposal in the incubator wiki now. It is here now http://wiki.apache.org/incubator/EasyAntProposal Working with Nicolas on the mentors issue. -Bertrand Antoine - To unsubscribe, e-mail: general-unsubscr...@incubator.apache.org For additional commands, e-mail: general-h...@incubator.apache.org
Re: [PROPOSAL] accept Easyant for incubation
Hi, I am going to be a mentor of EasyAnt. I am looking for other people willing to volunteer for that too. I am sure it is going to be interesting. Regards, Antoine On 1/17/2011 5:21 PM, Bertrand Delacretaz wrote: Hi Antoine, On Mon, Jan 17, 2011 at 10:25 PM, Antoine Levy-Lambertanto...@gmx.de wrote: We got no answer concerning Easyant. Does this mean that the proposal is non-controversial and that we should move on to a vote ? You'll need more than one mentor for that, and please move the proposal to http://wiki.apache.org/incubator as well. I cannot help with mentoring ATM unfortunately. -Bertrand - To unsubscribe, e-mail: general-unsubscr...@incubator.apache.org For additional commands, e-mail: general-h...@incubator.apache.org
Re: [PROPOSAL] accept Easyant for incubation
Hi, We got no answer concerning Easyant. Does this mean that the proposal is non-controversial and that we should move on to a vote ? Regards, Antoine On 1/11/2011 12:28 PM, Antoine Levy-Lambert wrote: Hello all, We'd like to propose Easyant for entry into the ASF incubator. Easyant is providing a solution for projects who want to use Ant and Ivy with a lot of ready-made templates, with the option to customize. The draft proposal is available at : http://easyant.org/projects/easyant/wiki/ApacheProposal The Ant project has voted to sponsor the entry of Easyant at the Incubator [1]. For your convenience I have pasted this proposal below the email. Regards, Antoine [1] http://mail-archives.apache.org/mod_mbox/ant-dev/201101.mbox/%3c3a73c5da-e4a2-4cb6-8423-0a985246f...@hibnet.org%3E h1. EasyAnt Proposal The following presents the proposal for creating a new EasyAnt project within the Apache Software Foundation. h2. Abstract Easyant is a build system based on Apache Ant and Apache Ivy. h2. Proposal EasyAnt goals are : * to leverage popularity and flexibility of Ant. * to integrate Apache Ivy, such that the build system combines a ready-to-use dependency manager. * to simplify standard build types, such as building web applications, JARs etc, by providing ready to use builds. * to provide conventions and guidelines. * to make plugging-in of fresh functionalities easy as writing simple Ant scripts as Easyant plugins. To still remain adaptable, * Though Easyant comes with a lot of conventions, we never lock you in. * Easyant allows you to easily extend existing modules or create and use your own modules. * Easyant makes migration from Ant very simple. Your legacy Ant scripts could still be leveraged with Easyant. h2. Rationale On the Ivy and Ant mailing list, an often asked question is Why Ivy is not shipped with Ant ?. Ant users (and some opponents) complains also about the bootstrapping of an Ant based build system: it is mainly about copying an existing one. EasyAnt is intended to response to both of these requirements: a prepackaged Ant + Ivy solution with standard build script ready to be used. Also taking inspiration from the success of Apache Maven, EasyAnt is adopting the convention over configuration principle. Then it could be easy to build standard project at least for all commons steps (no more need to reinvent the wheel between each projects). The common part should be easy enough to tune parameters without having deep ant knowledge (example changing the default directory of sources, force compilation to be java 1.4 compatible, etc...). Last but not least, EasyAnt is intended to provide a plugin based architecture to make it easy to contribute on a specific step of the build. Build plugins are pieces of functionality that can be plugged into or removed from a project. Plugins could actually perform a piece of your regular build, e.g. compile java classes during build of a complete war. Or, do a utility action, e.g. deploy your built web application onto a packaged Jetty server! h2. Current Status h3. Meritocracy Some of the core developers are already committers and members of the Apache Ant PMC, so they understand what it means to have a process based on meritocracy. h3. Community EasyAnt have a really small community (around 100 downloads per release). It is not a problem as the team is currently making restructuring changes. The team plans to make more promotion after those changes and strongly believe that community is the priority as the tool is designed to be easy to use. h3. Core Developers Xavier Hanin and Nicolas Lalev�ée are members of the PMC of Apache Ant. Jerome Benois is an Acceleo committer, he was a committer in Eclipse MDT Papyrus for two years and he's an active contributor in Eclipse Modeling and Model Driven community. He's a committer on Bushel project now contribute to the Ivy code base. He leads the EasyAnt for Eclipse plugin development. Jason Trump is leading Beet project on sourceforge (http://beet.sourceforge.net/). Jean-Louis Boudart is Hudson committer. h3. Alignment EasyAnt is based on Apache Ant and Ivy. Being part of Apache could help for a closer collaboration between projects. The team plans to reinject as much as possible stuff into Ant or Ivy like they've done in the past on : * extensionPoint : kind of IoC for targets (Ant) * import/include mechanism (Ant) * module inheritance (Ivy) h2. Known risks h3. Orphaned products Jean-Louis Boudart is the main developer of EasyAnt. Other developers got interested in this project and are now touching to every aspect of EasyAnt. Thus the risk of being orphaned is quite limited. h3. Inexperience with Open Source Many of the committers have experience working on open source projects. Two of them have experience as committers on other Apache projects. h3. Homogenous Developers The existing
Re: [PROPOSAL] accept Easyant for incubation
Hello Antoine, For me it's non-controversial. I'd love to see something like this, but I'm probably not going to be able to spend a lot of time contributing to it. Maybe some OSGi specific parts, especially if we can somehow integrate them with Bnd and BndTools. Greetings, Marcel On Jan 17, 2011, at 22:25 , Antoine Levy-Lambert wrote: Hi, We got no answer concerning Easyant. Does this mean that the proposal is non-controversial and that we should move on to a vote ? Regards, Antoine On 1/11/2011 12:28 PM, Antoine Levy-Lambert wrote: Hello all, We'd like to propose Easyant for entry into the ASF incubator. Easyant is providing a solution for projects who want to use Ant and Ivy with a lot of ready-made templates, with the option to customize. The draft proposal is available at : http://easyant.org/projects/easyant/wiki/ApacheProposal The Ant project has voted to sponsor the entry of Easyant at the Incubator [1]. For your convenience I have pasted this proposal below the email. Regards, Antoine [1] http://mail-archives.apache.org/mod_mbox/ant-dev/201101.mbox/%3c3a73c5da-e4a2-4cb6-8423-0a985246f...@hibnet.org%3E h1. EasyAnt Proposal The following presents the proposal for creating a new EasyAnt project within the Apache Software Foundation. h2. Abstract Easyant is a build system based on Apache Ant and Apache Ivy. h2. Proposal EasyAnt goals are : * to leverage popularity and flexibility of Ant. * to integrate Apache Ivy, such that the build system combines a ready-to-use dependency manager. * to simplify standard build types, such as building web applications, JARs etc, by providing ready to use builds. * to provide conventions and guidelines. * to make plugging-in of fresh functionalities easy as writing simple Ant scripts as Easyant plugins. To still remain adaptable, * Though Easyant comes with a lot of conventions, we never lock you in. * Easyant allows you to easily extend existing modules or create and use your own modules. * Easyant makes migration from Ant very simple. Your legacy Ant scripts could still be leveraged with Easyant. h2. Rationale On the Ivy and Ant mailing list, an often asked question is Why Ivy is not shipped with Ant ?. Ant users (and some opponents) complains also about the bootstrapping of an Ant based build system: it is mainly about copying an existing one. EasyAnt is intended to response to both of these requirements: a prepackaged Ant + Ivy solution with standard build script ready to be used. Also taking inspiration from the success of Apache Maven, EasyAnt is adopting the convention over configuration principle. Then it could be easy to build standard project at least for all commons steps (no more need to reinvent the wheel between each projects). The common part should be easy enough to tune parameters without having deep ant knowledge (example changing the default directory of sources, force compilation to be java 1.4 compatible, etc...). Last but not least, EasyAnt is intended to provide a plugin based architecture to make it easy to contribute on a specific step of the build. Build plugins are pieces of functionality that can be plugged into or removed from a project. Plugins could actually perform a piece of your regular build, e.g. compile java classes during build of a complete war. Or, do a utility action, e.g. deploy your built web application onto a packaged Jetty server! h2. Current Status h3. Meritocracy Some of the core developers are already committers and members of the Apache Ant PMC, so they understand what it means to have a process based on meritocracy. h3. Community EasyAnt have a really small community (around 100 downloads per release). It is not a problem as the team is currently making restructuring changes. The team plans to make more promotion after those changes and strongly believe that community is the priority as the tool is designed to be easy to use. h3. Core Developers Xavier Hanin and Nicolas Lalev™ée are members of the PMC of Apache Ant. Jerome Benois is an Acceleo committer, he was a committer in Eclipse MDT Papyrus for two years and he's an active contributor in Eclipse Modeling and Model Driven community. He's a committer on Bushel project now contribute to the Ivy code base. He leads the EasyAnt for Eclipse plugin development. Jason Trump is leading Beet project on sourceforge (http://beet.sourceforge.net/). Jean-Louis Boudart is Hudson committer. h3. Alignment EasyAnt is based on Apache Ant and Ivy. Being part of Apache could help for a closer collaboration between projects. The team plans to reinject as much as possible stuff into Ant or Ivy like they've done in the past on : * extensionPoint : kind of IoC for targets (Ant) * import/include mechanism (Ant) * module inheritance (Ivy) h2. Known risks h3.
Re: [PROPOSAL] accept Easyant for incubation
Hi Antoine, On Mon, Jan 17, 2011 at 10:25 PM, Antoine Levy-Lambert anto...@gmx.de wrote: We got no answer concerning Easyant. Does this mean that the proposal is non-controversial and that we should move on to a vote ? You'll need more than one mentor for that, and please move the proposal to http://wiki.apache.org/incubator as well. I cannot help with mentoring ATM unfortunately. -Bertrand - To unsubscribe, e-mail: general-unsubscr...@incubator.apache.org For additional commands, e-mail: general-h...@incubator.apache.org
Re: [PROPOSAL] accept Easyant for incubation
On 1/17/2011 5:21 PM, Bertrand Delacretaz wrote: Hi Antoine, You'll need more than one mentor for that, and please move the proposal to http://wiki.apache.org/incubator as well. Thanks Bertrand. There will be two mentors, myself and Nicolas Lalevée. Nicolas is a member of the Ant PMC , and a committer of ivy and committer and release manager of IvyDE. I cannot help with mentoring ATM unfortunately. -Bertrand Regards, Antoine - To unsubscribe, e-mail: general-unsubscr...@incubator.apache.org For additional commands, e-mail: general-h...@incubator.apache.org
Re: [PROPOSAL] accept Easyant for incubation
Hello Antoine, I like this proposal Cheers On Mon, Jan 17, 2011 at 10:25 PM, Antoine Levy-Lambert anto...@gmx.de wrote: Hi, We got no answer concerning Easyant. Does this mean that the proposal is non-controversial and that we should move on to a vote ? Regards, Antoine On 1/11/2011 12:28 PM, Antoine Levy-Lambert wrote: Hello all, We'd like to propose Easyant for entry into the ASF incubator. Easyant is providing a solution for projects who want to use Ant and Ivy with a lot of ready-made templates, with the option to customize. The draft proposal is available at : http://easyant.org/projects/easyant/wiki/ApacheProposal The Ant project has voted to sponsor the entry of Easyant at the Incubator [1]. For your convenience I have pasted this proposal below the email. Regards, Antoine [1] http://mail-archives.apache.org/mod_mbox/ant-dev/201101.mbox/%3c3a73c5da-e4a2-4cb6-8423-0a985246f...@hibnet.org%3E h1. EasyAnt Proposal The following presents the proposal for creating a new EasyAnt project within the Apache Software Foundation. h2. Abstract Easyant is a build system based on Apache Ant and Apache Ivy. h2. Proposal EasyAnt goals are : * to leverage popularity and flexibility of Ant. * to integrate Apache Ivy, such that the build system combines a ready-to-use dependency manager. * to simplify standard build types, such as building web applications, JARs etc, by providing ready to use builds. * to provide conventions and guidelines. * to make plugging-in of fresh functionalities easy as writing simple Ant scripts as Easyant plugins. To still remain adaptable, * Though Easyant comes with a lot of conventions, we never lock you in. * Easyant allows you to easily extend existing modules or create and use your own modules. * Easyant makes migration from Ant very simple. Your legacy Ant scripts could still be leveraged with Easyant. h2. Rationale On the Ivy and Ant mailing list, an often asked question is Why Ivy is not shipped with Ant ?. Ant users (and some opponents) complains also about the bootstrapping of an Ant based build system: it is mainly about copying an existing one. EasyAnt is intended to response to both of these requirements: a prepackaged Ant + Ivy solution with standard build script ready to be used. Also taking inspiration from the success of Apache Maven, EasyAnt is adopting the convention over configuration principle. Then it could be easy to build standard project at least for all commons steps (no more need to reinvent the wheel between each projects). The common part should be easy enough to tune parameters without having deep ant knowledge (example changing the default directory of sources, force compilation to be java 1.4 compatible, etc...). Last but not least, EasyAnt is intended to provide a plugin based architecture to make it easy to contribute on a specific step of the build. Build plugins are pieces of functionality that can be plugged into or removed from a project. Plugins could actually perform a piece of your regular build, e.g. compile java classes during build of a complete war. Or, do a utility action, e.g. deploy your built web application onto a packaged Jetty server! h2. Current Status h3. Meritocracy Some of the core developers are already committers and members of the Apache Ant PMC, so they understand what it means to have a process based on meritocracy. h3. Community EasyAnt have a really small community (around 100 downloads per release). It is not a problem as the team is currently making restructuring changes. The team plans to make more promotion after those changes and strongly believe that community is the priority as the tool is designed to be easy to use. h3. Core Developers Xavier Hanin and Nicolas Lalev ée are members of the PMC of Apache Ant. Jerome Benois is an Acceleo committer, he was a committer in Eclipse MDT Papyrus for two years and he's an active contributor in Eclipse Modeling and Model Driven community. He's a committer on Bushel project now contribute to the Ivy code base. He leads the EasyAnt for Eclipse plugin development. Jason Trump is leading Beet project on sourceforge (http://beet.sourceforge.net/). Jean-Louis Boudart is Hudson committer. h3. Alignment EasyAnt is based on Apache Ant and Ivy. Being part of Apache could help for a closer collaboration between projects. The team plans to reinject as much as possible stuff into Ant or Ivy like they've done in the past on : * extensionPoint : kind of IoC for targets (Ant) * import/include mechanism (Ant) * module inheritance (Ivy) h2. Known risks h3. Orphaned products Jean-Louis Boudart is the main developer of EasyAnt. Other developers got interested in this project and are now touching to every aspect of EasyAnt. Thus the risk of being orphaned is quite limited. h3. Inexperience with Open Source Many of the committers have