Re: OT: What the hell is catch-22 [was Re: howto: request committer status]

2004-07-02 Thread Alex Karasulu
That was the title of a famous book by Joseph Heller.  

http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/tg/detail/-/0684833395/002-0109254-6032057?v=glance

Alex

On Thu, 2004-07-01 at 08:50, John Casey wrote:
 :) sorry.
 
 Catch-22 is when no possible action can have a good result...sort of
 damned if you do, damned if you don't to use another cliche.
 
 HTH,
 john
 
 On Thu, 2004-07-01 at 08:36, Martin Skopp wrote:
  On Tue, 2004-06-29 at 23:27, John Casey wrote:
   Catch-22 alleviated.
  
  Could please someone explain a non-native speaker like me that
  mysterious catch-22 term.  Thanks folks,


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OT: What the hell is catch-22 [was Re: howto: request committer status]

2004-07-01 Thread Martin Skopp
On Tue, 2004-06-29 at 23:27, John Casey wrote:
 Catch-22 alleviated.

Could please someone explain a non-native speaker like me that
mysterious catch-22 term.  Thanks folks,
-- 
Martin Skopp
Riege Software International GmbH
Support: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED], Information: http://www.riege.com

This email is intended to be viewed with a nonproportional font.


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Re: OT: What the hell is catch-22 [was Re: howto: request committer status]

2004-07-01 Thread John Casey
:) sorry.

Catch-22 is when no possible action can have a good result...sort of
damned if you do, damned if you don't to use another cliche.

HTH,
john

On Thu, 2004-07-01 at 08:36, Martin Skopp wrote:
 On Tue, 2004-06-29 at 23:27, John Casey wrote:
  Catch-22 alleviated.
 
 Could please someone explain a non-native speaker like me that
 mysterious catch-22 term.  Thanks folks,
-- 
John Casey
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
CommonJava Open Components Project
http://www.commonjava.org


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RE: What the hell is catch-22 [was Re: howto: request committer status]

2004-07-01 Thread Peter Bright
It's a literary reference to Joseph Heller's frankly fantastic book,
Catch-22, first published in 1961.

It tells the story of an air force pilot, Yossarian, who would rather not be
a pilot because he doesn't want to die.  The ways of avoiding flying are
limited; one way to avoid service is to be crazy.

Anyone willing to fly more missions would be crazy, so all a pilot would
have to do to avoid flying more missions would have to tell the doctor that
they're crazy.  But doing that demonstrates that they have concern for their
own safety, and if you have concern for your own safety, you can't be crazy.
If you flew then you were crazy and didn't have to; but if you didn't want
to you were sane and had to.  That's Catch-22.  It's the best catch there
is.




 -Original Message-
 From: Martin Skopp [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Sent: 01 July 2004 13:36
 To: Maven Users List
 Subject: OT: What the hell is catch-22 [was Re: howto: request
 committer status]
 
 
 On Tue, 2004-06-29 at 23:27, John Casey wrote:
  Catch-22 alleviated.
 
 Could please someone explain a non-native speaker like me that
 mysterious catch-22 term.  Thanks folks,
 -- 
 Martin Skopp
 Riege Software International GmbH
 Support: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED], Information: http://www.riege.com
 
 This email is intended to be viewed with a nonproportional font.
 
 
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RE: What the hell is catch-22 [was Re: howto: request committer status]

2004-07-01 Thread Göschl,Siegfried
Lovely, it's one of my favorite books ... :-)

-Original Message-
From: Peter Bright [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Donnerstag, 01. Juli 2004 14:49
To: 'Maven Users List'
Subject: RE: What the hell is catch-22 [was Re: howto: request committer status]


It's a literary reference to Joseph Heller's frankly fantastic book, Catch-22, first 
published in 1961.

It tells the story of an air force pilot, Yossarian, who would rather not be a pilot 
because he doesn't want to die.  The ways of avoiding flying are limited; one way to 
avoid service is to be crazy.

Anyone willing to fly more missions would be crazy, so all a pilot would have to do to 
avoid flying more missions would have to tell the doctor that they're crazy.  But 
doing that demonstrates that they have concern for their own safety, and if you have 
concern for your own safety, you can't be crazy. If you flew then you were crazy and 
didn't have to; but if you didn't want to you were sane and had to.  That's Catch-22.  
It's the best catch there is.




 -Original Message-
 From: Martin Skopp [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Sent: 01 July 2004 13:36
 To: Maven Users List
 Subject: OT: What the hell is catch-22 [was Re: howto: request 
 committer status]
 
 
 On Tue, 2004-06-29 at 23:27, John Casey wrote:
  Catch-22 alleviated.
 
 Could please someone explain a non-native speaker like me that 
 mysterious catch-22 term.  Thanks folks,
 --
 Martin Skopp
 Riege Software International GmbH
 Support: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED], Information: http://www.riege.com
 
 This email is intended to be viewed with a nonproportional font.
 
 
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 To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 

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RE: howto: request committer status

2004-06-30 Thread Michael Mattox
Sounds like you just need read only access, you don't need commit for that.
Commit is to commit changes to CVS.  People usually start out by submitting
patches.  But if you're just doing a review, read only will work.  Everyone
has read only, see the project info page of the maven website.

 -Message d'origine-
 De : Brill Pappin [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Envoye : mardi 29 juin 2004 22:43
 A : Maven Users List
 Objet : howto: request committer status


 How do I go about requesting commit status for this project?
 I would like to be able to research ideas that users have, in order to
 make the tool better and give each idea a fair review.

 Thanks for the attention,
 - Brill Pappin




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Re: howto: request committer status

2004-06-30 Thread Brill Pappin
Hello Jason,
I appreciate the work you and several of your compatriots have done. 
From my perspective it's moving in the right direction and I've seen 
you around in several places for several years (I think your the same 
person anyway).

I do know the etiquette for the apache group, though I don't subscribe 
to it for projects I have originated. I was trying to make the point 
that I was losing faith in the experience and competence of some 
developers who do have commit status, essentially saying if someone 
with the the responsibility wont take responsibility, then let me take it.

- Brill Pappin
Jason van Zyl wrote:
On Tue, 2004-06-29 at 16:43, Brill Pappin wrote:
 

How do I go about requesting commit status for this project?
   

It is bad etiquette to request committer status in OSS projects and
generally looked dimly upon. The normal course of action is you
contribute for a period of time and one of the existing committers will
nominate you for commit status.
The last two core committers inducted were John and Trygve. These only
happened recently and John has been contributing pretty much from the
very start, he has contributed a great deal wrt user help and code.
Trygve has also contributed for some time, understands maven2 from
top-to-bottom, and contributed large chunks of non-trivial code for
maven2.
I think you're the first person who has ever asked for commit status, so
the answer is you don't request committer status, it will be offered
when someone feels you've earned it.
 


--
Any sufficiently advanced magic is indistinguishable from technology.
 - Arthur C Anticlarke
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RE: howto: request committer status

2004-06-30 Thread Michael Mattox
 I think you're the first person who has ever asked for commit status, so
 the answer is you don't request committer status, it will be offered
 when someone feels you've earned it.

I think you and the others were a little hard on him.  I got the impression
that he doesn't know how it works and that he thought he needed committer
status just to read the code.  He did not ask for it as you claim in the
quote above.  he asked how to get it and that means he wants to know how the
process works.  I think the correct answer is you contribute to the project
with patches and if you become a major contributer you might be offered
commit status.



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Re: howto: request committer status

2004-06-29 Thread Jason van Zyl
On Tue, 2004-06-29 at 16:43, Brill Pappin wrote:
 How do I go about requesting commit status for this project?

It is bad etiquette to request committer status in OSS projects and
generally looked dimly upon. The normal course of action is you
contribute for a period of time and one of the existing committers will
nominate you for commit status.

The last two core committers inducted were John and Trygve. These only
happened recently and John has been contributing pretty much from the
very start, he has contributed a great deal wrt user help and code.
Trygve has also contributed for some time, understands maven2 from
top-to-bottom, and contributed large chunks of non-trivial code for
maven2.

I think you're the first person who has ever asked for commit status, so
the answer is you don't request committer status, it will be offered
when someone feels you've earned it.

-- 
jvz.

Jason van Zyl
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://maven.apache.org

happiness is like a butterfly: the more you chase it, the more it will
elude you, but if you turn your attention to other things, it will come
and sit softly on your shoulder ...

 -- Thoreau 


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Re: howto: request committer status

2004-06-29 Thread Craig S . Cottingham
On Jun 29, 2004, at 17:10, Jason van Zyl wrote:
On Tue, 2004-06-29 at 16:43, Brill Pappin wrote:
How do I go about requesting commit status for this project?
It is bad etiquette to request committer status in OSS projects and
generally looked dimly upon. The normal course of action is you
contribute for a period of time and one of the existing committers will
nominate you for commit status.
Sounds like a catch-22. IIRC, Brill has been told that even if he 
produces a patch to do what he wants, it won't be applied.

--
Craig S. Cottingham
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
OpenPGP key available from:
http://pgp.mit.edu:11371/pks/lookup?op=getsearch=0x7977F79C
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Re: howto: request committer status

2004-06-29 Thread Jason van Zyl
On Tue, 2004-06-29 at 18:16, Craig S. Cottingham wrote:
 On Jun 29, 2004, at 17:10, Jason van Zyl wrote:
 
  On Tue, 2004-06-29 at 16:43, Brill Pappin wrote:
  How do I go about requesting commit status for this project?
 
  It is bad etiquette to request committer status in OSS projects and
  generally looked dimly upon. The normal course of action is you
  contribute for a period of time and one of the existing committers will
  nominate you for commit status.
 
 Sounds like a catch-22. 

It's not a catch-22, ask John and Trygve how many  patches I rejected
and yet they still became committers. 

 IIRC, Brill has been told that even if he 
 produces a patch to do what he wants, it won't be applied.

Happens all time. We are not obliged to commit every patch floated our
way. I don't know what patch you're talking about specifically but lots
of patches aren't accepted. I would venture to say most of them are not.

The onus is on the submitter of a patch to convince the folks
maintaining the code in question to accept it. If the maintainers don't
like it, it's not accepted. It's pretty simple. Debate is reserved for
committers and to become a committer you have to find existing
committers you work well with. Simple case in point is Carlos who worked
with Vincent on the AspectJ plugin and now is the lead on that plugin.
Another case in point is Arnaud who contributed so much to the PDF
plugin that he now takes care of that. These are the models to follow if
you wish to be a committer.

 --
 Craig S. Cottingham
 [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 OpenPGP key available from:
 http://pgp.mit.edu:11371/pks/lookup?op=getsearch=0x7977F79C
 
 
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-- 
jvz.

Jason van Zyl
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://maven.apache.org

happiness is like a butterfly: the more you chase it, the more it will
elude you, but if you turn your attention to other things, it will come
and sit softly on your shoulder ...

 -- Thoreau 


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Re: howto: request committer status

2004-06-29 Thread Brett Porter
No idea what patch, but it was probably me that rejected it. Sorry if
it caused an offence, but I always try to give a reason that something
is not suitable. If I didn't, or you don't think it's correct, you're
welcome to continue to debate it in the relevant JIRA issue, or take
it up on the -dev list if you want the opinion of other committers.

The user list is the wrong place for this discussion. Let's keep it to
the user's questions.

But if after all that the -dev list has also not supported the patch
or there have been no additional response, you might have to accept
that we've been doing this longer and probably know better :)

It's not a unique situation - even when I commit stuff I get rebuked
for it sometimes because other developers don't agree - and when
they've been doing it longer than I have I accept that they probably
know better :)

Cheers,
Brett 

On 29 Jun 2004 18:48:30 -0400, Jason van Zyl [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 On Tue, 2004-06-29 at 18:16, Craig S. Cottingham wrote:
  On Jun 29, 2004, at 17:10, Jason van Zyl wrote:
 
   On Tue, 2004-06-29 at 16:43, Brill Pappin wrote:
   How do I go about requesting commit status for this project?
  
   It is bad etiquette to request committer status in OSS projects and
   generally looked dimly upon. The normal course of action is you
   contribute for a period of time and one of the existing committers will
   nominate you for commit status.
 
  Sounds like a catch-22.
 
 It's not a catch-22, ask John and Trygve how many  patches I rejected
 and yet they still became committers.
 
  IIRC, Brill has been told that even if he
  produces a patch to do what he wants, it won't be applied.
 
 Happens all time. We are not obliged to commit every patch floated our
 way. I don't know what patch you're talking about specifically but lots
 of patches aren't accepted. I would venture to say most of them are not.
 
 The onus is on the submitter of a patch to convince the folks
 maintaining the code in question to accept it. If the maintainers don't
 like it, it's not accepted. It's pretty simple. Debate is reserved for
 committers and to become a committer you have to find existing
 committers you work well with. Simple case in point is Carlos who worked
 with Vincent on the AspectJ plugin and now is the lead on that plugin.
 Another case in point is Arnaud who contributed so much to the PDF
 plugin that he now takes care of that. These are the models to follow if
 you wish to be a committer.
 
  --
  Craig S. Cottingham
  [EMAIL PROTECTED]
  OpenPGP key available from:
  http://pgp.mit.edu:11371/pks/lookup?op=getsearch=0x7977F79C
 
 
  -
  To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
  For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 
 
 
 --
 jvz.
 
 Jason van Zyl
 [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 http://maven.apache.org
 
 happiness is like a butterfly: the more you chase it, the more it will
 elude you, but if you turn your attention to other things, it will come
 and sit softly on your shoulder ...
 
  -- Thoreau
 
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Re: howto: request committer status

2004-06-29 Thread John Casey
Without getting into the merits of his patch, it's a little bit
ridiculous to expect to gain committer status immediately and with no
effort on the project. If he can't get the patch through, then he still
has the option to fork the war plugin. Catch-22 alleviated.

-john

On Tue, 2004-06-29 at 18:16, Craig S.Cottingham wrote:
 On Jun 29, 2004, at 17:10, Jason van Zyl wrote:
 
  On Tue, 2004-06-29 at 16:43, Brill Pappin wrote:
  How do I go about requesting commit status for this project?
 
  It is bad etiquette to request committer status in OSS projects and
  generally looked dimly upon. The normal course of action is you
  contribute for a period of time and one of the existing committers will
  nominate you for commit status.
 
 Sounds like a catch-22. IIRC, Brill has been told that even if he 
 produces a patch to do what he wants, it won't be applied.
 
 --
 Craig S. Cottingham
 [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 OpenPGP key available from:
 http://pgp.mit.edu:11371/pks/lookup?op=getsearch=0x7977F79C
 
 
 -
 To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
-- 
John Casey
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
CommonJava Open Components Project
http://www.commonjava.org


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Re: howto: request committer status

2004-06-29 Thread John Casey
Brett,

AFAIK this is still purely hypothetical. Not to worry.

-j

On Tue, 2004-06-29 at 19:14, Brett Porter wrote:
 No idea what patch, but it was probably me that rejected it. Sorry if
 it caused an offence, but I always try to give a reason that something
 is not suitable. If I didn't, or you don't think it's correct, you're
 welcome to continue to debate it in the relevant JIRA issue, or take
 it up on the -dev list if you want the opinion of other committers.
 
 The user list is the wrong place for this discussion. Let's keep it to
 the user's questions.
 
 But if after all that the -dev list has also not supported the patch
 or there have been no additional response, you might have to accept
 that we've been doing this longer and probably know better :)
 
 It's not a unique situation - even when I commit stuff I get rebuked
 for it sometimes because other developers don't agree - and when
 they've been doing it longer than I have I accept that they probably
 know better :)
 
 Cheers,
 Brett 
 
 On 29 Jun 2004 18:48:30 -0400, Jason van Zyl [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
  On Tue, 2004-06-29 at 18:16, Craig S. Cottingham wrote:
   On Jun 29, 2004, at 17:10, Jason van Zyl wrote:
  
On Tue, 2004-06-29 at 16:43, Brill Pappin wrote:
How do I go about requesting commit status for this project?
   
It is bad etiquette to request committer status in OSS projects and
generally looked dimly upon. The normal course of action is you
contribute for a period of time and one of the existing committers will
nominate you for commit status.
  
   Sounds like a catch-22.
  
  It's not a catch-22, ask John and Trygve how many  patches I rejected
  and yet they still became committers.
  
   IIRC, Brill has been told that even if he
   produces a patch to do what he wants, it won't be applied.
  
  Happens all time. We are not obliged to commit every patch floated our
  way. I don't know what patch you're talking about specifically but lots
  of patches aren't accepted. I would venture to say most of them are not.
  
  The onus is on the submitter of a patch to convince the folks
  maintaining the code in question to accept it. If the maintainers don't
  like it, it's not accepted. It's pretty simple. Debate is reserved for
  committers and to become a committer you have to find existing
  committers you work well with. Simple case in point is Carlos who worked
  with Vincent on the AspectJ plugin and now is the lead on that plugin.
  Another case in point is Arnaud who contributed so much to the PDF
  plugin that he now takes care of that. These are the models to follow if
  you wish to be a committer.
  
   --
   Craig S. Cottingham
   [EMAIL PROTECTED]
   OpenPGP key available from:
   http://pgp.mit.edu:11371/pks/lookup?op=getsearch=0x7977F79C
  
  
   -
   To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
   For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
  
  
  
  --
  jvz.
  
  Jason van Zyl
  [EMAIL PROTECTED]
  http://maven.apache.org
  
  happiness is like a butterfly: the more you chase it, the more it will
  elude you, but if you turn your attention to other things, it will come
  and sit softly on your shoulder ...
  
   -- Thoreau
  
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-- 
John Casey
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
CommonJava Open Components Project
http://www.commonjava.org


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