stas 02/04/27 22:27:20 Added: admin changes_file.pod Log: This doc clears the confusion regarding the need and the maintenance guidelines of I<Changes.pod> files in the project. Revision Changes Path 1.1 modperl-docs/admin/changes_file.pod Index: changes_file.pod =================================================================== =head1 NAME mod_perl Documentation project's Changes File Specs =head1 Description This doc clears the confusion regarding the need and the maintenance guidelines of I<Changes.pod> files in the project. =head1 Who Has Contributed What And When All the modifications of every single file can be viewed via C<cvs log> command. e.g., to check the history of this very file, one would run: % cvs log admin/changes_file.pod Which will display all the commit logs, who has committed the change, who has submitted the changes, etc. =head1 The Art of Changes File The I<Changes.pod> document is not the same as the history of all changes. This document is for end user consumption, who is interested to know what are the major changes since the last time she read the documents. Or minor but important changes, like bug fixes. Therefore the I<Changes.pod> document is only needed when some sub-project goes through changes which will be of interest to the reader. Don't just add I<Changes.pod> everywhere, until you really think it's needed. The format of this document should be as dense as possible, so the reader can read through it fast and pin-point if there is something interesting to it. There is no need to log the date every time the change is done ('cvs log' has all the info). Though it's nice to group the changes by certain milestones, so let's say every few month a time stamp is added in front of the group of the changes since the last timestamp and new changes will go to the new group. The change entries in the I<docs/1.0/guide/Changes.pod> is a good example of that. In addition it used to add a version number for each milestone, which is very optional now. =head1 The Scope of Changes.pod Usually we have a separate I<Changes.pod> file for each sub-set of the documents. If you feel that the changes for a few sub-sets nested in the same super-set of docs can be maintained in one file, have only one I<Changes.pod>. Later if this file becomes too overloaded and its added value is getting diminished, split it into a few I<Changes.pod> files placed in each sub-set. Or if you think that this will happen in the near future do this from the beginning to avoid the slicing work later. =head1 Adding Credits If you are the maintainer of the document, you don't have to credit each change done by you, with your name, simply leave the change entry un-credited, which automatically implies that you did that. If someone commits something to the document maintained by someone else simply mark it with your name e.g. [Thomas Klausner]. Those who commit all the time, should pick some short (nick?)name that will distinguish them from others and make their changes with it. e.g [thomas]. The idea is to have the changes file with as little noise as possible. There is a special case where we want to credit people who contributed very minor fixes, which don't deserve a separate changes entry. In this case just have a special entry like C<Minor fixes>, where you simply list the names of those who contributed because we want to give credits to everybody. Again the I<docs/1.0/guide/Changes.pod> file perfectly demonstrates that. =head1 Sample Changes.pod See <docs/1.0/guide/Changes.pod>. =cut
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