On Wed, Jan 18, 2006 at 08:01:07PM -0500, Jorey Bump wrote:
...
So, please, take a few moments to decide amongst yourselves who
should have binding votes on mod_python (i.e., who has earned it),
...
I vote that Grisha gets all three votes. Benevolent dictatorship is the
Python way, after all.
Jorey Bump wrote:
Mike Looijmans wrote:
Seriously, I think Grisha's way is right - the three musketeers should
decide based on the feedback they get. There's no substitute for
running on other people's machines...
2006/1/19, Gregory (Grisha) Trubetskoy [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
Thanks Roy. Very
Jim Gallacher wrote:
Jorey Bump wrote:
IOW, could you guys list the OS on which you run, and not merely test,
mod_python?
By you guys I assume you mean the above 4 people?
Yeah, youse 4 guys. :)
On the other hand, you may mean *all* the people on python-dev who test
a release candidate
Jim Gallacher wrote:
Jorey Bump wrote:
+1 here, but since the build process and typical MPM differs among
platforms, could we see a list that this group represents? I'm most
interested in default nonvirtualized environments used in production
or for principal development. This information
On Thu, 19 Jan 2006, Jorey Bump wrote:
+1 here, but since the build process and typical MPM differs among platforms,
could we see a list that this group represents?
This group would not represent any platforms when acting in _this_
capacity. One of the group's responsibility would be to
Roy T. Fielding wrote:
It looks like mod_python is making good progress and everyone
is collaborating in the Apache way of testing and voting.
That's great!
Unfortunately, I have almost no insight into who these great people
are that are doing the RM task and testing and voting and preparing
Hi,
It's OK for me !
Regards,
Nicolas
2006/1/19, Gregory (Grisha) Trubetskoy [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
Thanks Roy. Very timely, since 3.2.6 is (so far) going to be a
final/stable release.
I propose that for starters those people are:
me (I'm also in the Apache HTTP Server PMC)
Jim Gallacher