Chris Browne wrote:
> josh@agliodbs.com (Josh Berkus) writes:
> > Bruce,
> >
> > Realistically I just don't see getting everything in the ToDo patch
> > list in; my vote is that we start deferring stuff for 8.4 if it
> > doesn't have a reviewer, except for items which were submitted early
> > in the cycle (and to whom it would be unfair).
> >
> > If that means shortening the 8.4 cycle somewhat, I'm for that
> > ... feature freeze in Feburary would be even better than April,
> > because it means we could be in Beta for the May-June-July
> > conferences, and increase our probability of being able to release
> > at a major conference or PostgreSQL conference.
>
> If we're pushing stuff planned for 8.3 off into 8.4, then doesn't that
> mean that we'd be inclined to _lengthen_ the 8.4 cycle?
>
> If we were to shorten the 8.4 cycle, that seems likely to me to worsen
> the problem, so that I'd expect to see even more stuff deferred for
> 8.5 than was the case with 8.3...
And, as I remember, we already deferred some stuff during 8.2 for 8.3.
:-(
> > Obviously for 8.4 reviewers need to start reviewing stuff from the
> > first week of the development cycle. I also don't actually see
> > anything wrong with a 3-month feature freeze if we can somehow
> > branch development earlier. Easy for me to say, I know.
>
> Well, if people are essentially already working on patches for 8.4
> *now*, but just deferring merging until after 8.3 is committed +
> released, then we've got 8.4 work underway already.
>
> Unfortunately, that's also likely to worsen the problem of the
> reviewers' queues being even more overflowing.
>
> I'd sorta like to see the Tom Lanes and Bruce Momjians of the project
> getting to have some time to work on things that *they'd* like add, as
> opposed to turning things into a spiral cycle where they keep spending
> more and more of their time reviewing patches, as opposed to doing
> things they find neat and new. Too many iterations of that sort of
> thing, and they'll not want to ever see a patch again...
Another good summary.
Myself, I have always done what no one wanted to do so that more people
can do what they want to do, and I am OK with that. It helps the
project move forward faster than if I did only what I wanted to do.
-- Bruce Momjian <bruce@momjian.us> http://momjian.us EnterpriseDB
http://www.enterprisedb.com
+ If your life is a hard drive, Christ can be your backup. +