An anecdote that might be applicable:
Look at version controls over the last few decades:
CVS —> Apache Subersion —> Git
Each transition was a major improvement.
That may lead you believe that Subversion is dead and long gone. And you would
be wrong.
Subversion is still alive because
IMO, there are tow scenarios:
1. Storm is in dead. No one uses it anymore, and no one needs security patches,
etc.
2. Storm is in maintenance mode. While new features may not be added, there are
enough contributors left tp at least address any security concerns.
Wether we pursue the attic o
One side note looking to see what folks are migrating or moved to if not
using Storm actively. Any cloud native DAG platform to recommend?
-Sunil
On Wed, Feb 1, 2023 at 6:12 PM Stephen Powis via user
wrote:
> Ah Yea, also not opposed to the move to the attic if it's determined to be
> most
Hello,
I'd be happy to contribute to Apache Storm in any kind of way.
Just let me know what kind of help I could provide.
Disclaimer: I not skilled in clojure language, so Storm 1.x
maintenance is probably not something I could do efficiently, for I
can help on Java side and on "management" stuff
Hi Aaron,
I am CC the users@ list as they weren't contained in the initial
proposal. Perhaps, there are people or institutions in the wild, who
want to volunteer or give it a try (still at the ASF level).
Of course it shouldn't prevent a VOTE for moving to the attic, but an
additional try to
Hi Aaron,
I am CC the users@ list as they weren't contained in the initial
proposal. Perhaps, there are people or institutions in the wild, who
want to volunteer or give it a try (still at the ASF level).
Of course it shouldn't prevent a VOTE for moving to the attic, but an
additional try to