GForge: possible renaissance (hah!) for open-source SourceForge
Posted Dec 6, 2002 19:05 UTC (Fri) by
lolando (subscriber, #7139)
Parent article:
GForge: possible renaissance for open-source SourceForge
Actually, I'm going to re-comment on that article. I'm trying to restrain myself, but it really made me sad for the reporter. I've also talked a lot with Christian Bayle, the "better half" of the Debian-SF team. While I may not talk in his name, I know
GForge: possible renaissance for open-source SourceForge
The Free Sourceforge never died. Debian-SF started *before* VA turned
non-Free, and it's still alive (more than ever). Same comment about "A key piece of open-source infrastructure is back".
Further and more significantly, Tim is cooperating with the other
leading open-source fork, Debian-SF (http://www.nongnu.org/debian-sf/):
Future releases of Debian's package will be GForge-based.[2]
I felt quite hurt by the "other" in "the other leading open-source fork".
There's no belittling of Tim's work, but it's very recent and shouldn't be called "leading" before it has matured (or we finished integrating his changes into Debian-SF, which is under way).
Short list of *public* sites using Debian-SF:
There are also numerous non-public instances, some of which we have heard about: the MITRE corporation (somewhere at the US Air Force), the Icelandic NIC, my own company, Christian's. Probably many more.
With reasonable luck, the end result is that open-source development of
SourceForge will regain the momentum lost since 2001.
Allow me to choke here. Lost momentum? You want our 1000-lines changelog? You want our diff? Have a look at the Debian-SF developers
and users mailing-lists and their archives (devel and users).
[1] The Debian project's Debian-SF package is based on alexandria 2.5,
the last full release before VA Software withdrew development code and
removed the CVS repository.
Not true. We have both 2.5 and 2.6. The 2.5 package is included in Debian stable (and you know what they say about Debian being out of date with software). It's solid, it installs with a simple apt-get install sourceforge, and it works out of the box. The 2.6 packages, based on the latest (2.6.1pre4) snapshot, are where we do most of our development. We have cleaned up the themes system (and stolen most of the themes from Savannah :-) along the way), made the package able to work on multiple servers, made it modular (and theoretically able to run on different MTAs or LDAP servers), we made a nice plugin system allowing external features to be easily added (a calendar is under development), we also cleaned up the VA-specific code and links and docs and stuff...
Again, I am not in any way trying to make Tim's work worthless of praise or anything. His Jabber thingy is a good idea, his new interface is nice, and he seems to be much better than us at public relations ;-). We'll integrate his changes (possibly turning his new interface into a new theme and his Jabber support into a new plugin) and make sure that Gforge is easy to install, thus providing You, the User, with the best of both worlds.
As for the other forks, I'm too lazy to answer Carl in yet another post, but the situation is as follows: whilc it might be very hard to merge back with forks started as early as SF 2.0 or 1.5, we might be able to make their changes enter Debian-SF/Gforge, possibly via the plugins system.
There. I think I've said all I wanted to say concerning the actual information. Now for the last bits of bitterness I have to let out: Rick Moen, would you *please* try and check your information before sending it to LWN? Chistian and I spent two years working on Debian-SF, and not in secret at all. Maybe contacting us about our status would have been nice, polite, and needed? And Rebecca Sobol, since you're a journalist, maybe you should have checked your sources too before posting that to the headlines. I love LWN. Please don't let it turn into Slashdot.
I'm done with this post. Please don't take it as aggressive, I'm just trying to point out where the initial article was wrong. Credit would be nice too, but accuracy is important.
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