Chandler Carruth via llvm-dev
2019-Nov-18 07:48 UTC
[llvm-dev] RFC: Moving toward Discord and Discourse for LLVM's discussions
Hello everyone, *Short version:*I've set up an LLVM Discord server for real time chat (similar to IRC) and an LLVM Discourse server for forums (similar to email lists): https://discord.gg/xS7Z362 https://llvm.discourse.group/ Please join and use these new services. They are only partially set up and still very new, so don't hesitate to improve them and/or reach out to this thread with any issues you see or things you want to fix. Also, both services have dedicated feedback channels. Do feel free to use Discourse for technical discussions, although try not to create duplicate discussions (any more than you would between the lists and Bugzilla) and make sure the people you're having the discussion with are fine using Discourse instead of the email list. In case Discourse doesn't work out, we'll collect and archive everything so it isn't lost. *Longer version & more details:*During this year's Women in Compilers and Tools meeting, folks expressed very clearly that our communication systems cause a non-trivial amount of friction for new people trying to find out about, learn, or contribute to LLVM. Both IRC for chatting and mailing lists for longer-form discussions are unfamiliar, difficult, and often intimidating for newcomers. While I have long been a fan and resistant to change in these areas, the feedback from folks at WiCT was compelling and important for us as a community to address. Even if it means I have to let go of my precious IRC. ;] We talked to a bunch of people and looked at the options out there and the most promising ones were Discord for chatting and Discourse for longer-form discussions. Meike and I have set up both an initial Discord and Discourse server. You can find them here: https://discord.gg/xS7Z362 https://llvm.discourse.group/ There is still a lot of work to be done. Notably, it'd be great for folks to clean up and improve the summaries for each of the groups in Discourse, and I'll be asking various people to help moderate on both Discourse and Discord. If you'd like to help out with a specific set of improvements to these, don't hesitate to reach out to me or Meike and we can get you set up. Some specific things we're already working on: - Getting Discord verified with a nice URL. - Archives of mailing lists on Discourse so you can search in one place, etc. - See the plan here: https://llvm.discourse.group/t/mirroring-and-archiving-llvm-mailing-lists-on-discourse/61 - Moving Discourse to forums.llvm.org. - Documenting the best way to move to Discourse while preserving a similarly email-focused workflow. We're just adding these for now, but I'd like people to seriously try using them. While IRC has served us fairly well, I think it is one of the bigger barriers to entry. Our email lists are more effective, but also have had serious infrastructure challenges over the years: a constant flow of spam, bouncing for several major email providers, etc. Discourse has very powerful email-based workflows available and I think we should seriously consider moving to Discourse long-term instead of the email lists. I also want to say thanks to all the folks at the WiCT workshop for giving me and others feedback. I was pretty set in my ways around these kind of things, but hearing the kinds of challenges this has posed to people less established in the community was a real eye opener. It takes a lot to speak up like this, and I really appreciate it. I hope this also helps start to address these long-standing issues. Also a huge thanks to Tanya for organizing the WICT workshop and Meike for helping drive this message home to me and doing a bunch of the work getting these things set up. I wouldn't have been able to do it without her help, especially around Discord bots. -Chandler -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: <http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/attachments/20191117/118e81fc/attachment-0001.html>
David Chisnall via llvm-dev
2019-Nov-18 09:48 UTC
[llvm-dev] RFC: Moving toward Discord and Discourse for LLVM's discussions
Hi Chandler, One of the things that came up in our discussion at the WiCT workshop as a barrier for new members of the community was the fact that key decisions are often made at round tables at developer meetings without involvement of the wider community, particularly the large fraction that is not able to travel to the West Coast. More broadly, the opacity of the LLVM Project decision making was raised as something that is problematic when attempting to build a wider and more diverse community. I therefore find it slightly ironic that this is being announced after a 10-person discussion at an ancillary workshop that was attached to the main DevMeeting. This seems like a trend in the wrong direction. While I am in general in favour of creating new channels to extend the reach of the community, I don't believe that something like this that requires existing community members to participate to be useful should be launched without a wider discussion. This paragraph in your announcement stood out: > We talked to a bunch of people and looked at the options out there and > the most promising ones were Discord for chatting and Discourse for > longer-form discussions. Who are these 'bunch of people'? Why were they selected to make this decision (and by whom)? Note that I don't object to the creation of a Discord server (though the 'YOUR CONTENT' section of the T&Cs contains clauses that I'm unwilling to agree to and so I won't be participating), only to the process through which it was set up. David On 18/11/2019 07:48, Chandler Carruth via llvm-dev wrote:> Hello everyone, > > *Short version: > *I've set up an LLVM Discord server for real time chat (similar to IRC) > and an LLVM Discourse server for forums (similar to email lists): > https://discord.gg/xS7Z362 > https://llvm.discourse.group/ > > Please join and use these new services. They are only partially set up > and still very new, so don't hesitate to improve them and/or reach out > to this thread with any issues you see or things you want to fix. Also, > both services have dedicated feedback channels. > > Do feel free to use Discourse for technical discussions, although try > not to create duplicate discussions (any more than you would between the > lists and Bugzilla) and make sure the people you're having the > discussion with are fine using Discourse instead of the email list. In > case Discourse doesn't work out, we'll collect and archive everything so > it isn't lost. > > *Longer version & more details: > *During this year's Women in Compilers and Tools meeting, folks > expressed very clearly that our communication systems cause a > non-trivial amount of friction for new people trying to find out about, > learn, or contribute to LLVM. Both IRC for chatting and mailing lists > for longer-form discussions are unfamiliar, difficult, and often > intimidating for newcomers. While I have long been a fan and resistant > to change in these areas, the feedback from folks at WiCT was compelling > and important for us as a community to address. Even if it means I have > to let go of my precious IRC. ;] > > We talked to a bunch of people and looked at the options out there and > the most promising ones were Discord for chatting and Discourse for > longer-form discussions. Meike and I have set up both an initial Discord > and Discourse server. You can find them here: > https://discord.gg/xS7Z362 > https://llvm.discourse.group/ > > There is still a lot of work to be done. Notably, it'd be great for > folks to clean up and improve the summaries for each of the groups in > Discourse, and I'll be asking various people to help moderate on both > Discourse and Discord. If you'd like to help out with a specific set of > improvements to these, don't hesitate to reach out to me or Meike and we > can get you set up. Some specific things we're already working on: > > * Getting Discord verified with a nice URL. > * Archives of mailing lists on Discourse so you can search in one > place, etc. > o See the plan here: > https://llvm.discourse.group/t/mirroring-and-archiving-llvm-mailing-lists-on-discourse/61 > * Moving Discourse to forums.llvm.org <http://forums.llvm.org>. > * Documenting the best way to move to Discourse while preserving a > similarly email-focused workflow. > > > We're just adding these for now, but I'd like people to seriously try > using them. While IRC has served us fairly well, I think it is one of > the bigger barriers to entry. Our email lists are more effective, but > also have had serious infrastructure challenges over the years: a > constant flow of spam, bouncing for several major email providers, etc. > Discourse has very powerful email-based workflows available and I think > we should seriously consider moving to Discourse long-term instead of > the email lists. > > I also want to say thanks to all the folks at the WiCT workshop for > giving me and others feedback. I was pretty set in my ways around these > kind of things, but hearing the kinds of challenges this has posed to > people less established in the community was a real eye opener. It takes > a lot to speak up like this, and I really appreciate it. I hope this > also helps start to address these long-standing issues. Also a huge > thanks to Tanya for organizing the WICT workshop and Meike for helping > drive this message home to me and doing a bunch of the work getting > these things set up. I wouldn't have been able to do it without her > help, especially around Discord bots. > > -Chandler > > _______________________________________________ > LLVM Developers mailing list > llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org > https://lists.llvm.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/llvm-dev >
David Zarzycki via llvm-dev
2019-Nov-18 10:30 UTC
[llvm-dev] RFC: Moving toward Discord and Discourse for LLVM's discussions
> On Nov 18, 2019, at 9:48 AM, Chandler Carruth via llvm-dev <llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org> wrote: > > Do feel free to use Discourse for technical discussions, although try not to create duplicate discussions (any more than you would between the lists and Bugzilla) and make sure the people you're having the discussion with are fine using Discourse instead of the email list. In case Discourse doesn't work out, we'll collect and archive everything so it isn't lost.When will the project decide to shutdown one or the other? What will the criteria be?
Robinson, Paul via llvm-dev
2019-Nov-18 13:48 UTC
[llvm-dev] RFC: Moving toward Discord and Discourse for LLVM's discussions
| mailing lists for longer-form discussions are unfamiliar, difficult, and often intimidating for newcomers Um… what? While I know (via my own children) that folks nowadays use multiple avenues of communication, it’s *really* hard to imagine email as a *mechanism* being unfamiliar/difficult/intimidating. Moving to a new mechanism wouldn’t alter the fact of the very large number of strangers participating, which to my mind would be the unfamiliar/difficult/intimidating part. --paulr From: llvm-dev <llvm-dev-bounces at lists.llvm.org> On Behalf Of Chandler Carruth via llvm-dev Sent: Monday, November 18, 2019 2:48 AM To: llvm-dev <llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org> Subject: [llvm-dev] RFC: Moving toward Discord and Discourse for LLVM's discussions Hello everyone, Short version: I've set up an LLVM Discord server for real time chat (similar to IRC) and an LLVM Discourse server for forums (similar to email lists): https://discord.gg/xS7Z362 https://llvm.discourse.group/ Please join and use these new services. They are only partially set up and still very new, so don't hesitate to improve them and/or reach out to this thread with any issues you see or things you want to fix. Also, both services have dedicated feedback channels. Do feel free to use Discourse for technical discussions, although try not to create duplicate discussions (any more than you would between the lists and Bugzilla) and make sure the people you're having the discussion with are fine using Discourse instead of the email list. In case Discourse doesn't work out, we'll collect and archive everything so it isn't lost. Longer version & more details: During this year's Women in Compilers and Tools meeting, folks expressed very clearly that our communication systems cause a non-trivial amount of friction for new people trying to find out about, learn, or contribute to LLVM. Both IRC for chatting and mailing lists for longer-form discussions are unfamiliar, difficult, and often intimidating for newcomers. While I have long been a fan and resistant to change in these areas, the feedback from folks at WiCT was compelling and important for us as a community to address. Even if it means I have to let go of my precious IRC. ;] We talked to a bunch of people and looked at the options out there and the most promising ones were Discord for chatting and Discourse for longer-form discussions. Meike and I have set up both an initial Discord and Discourse server. You can find them here: https://discord.gg/xS7Z362 https://llvm.discourse.group/ There is still a lot of work to be done. Notably, it'd be great for folks to clean up and improve the summaries for each of the groups in Discourse, and I'll be asking various people to help moderate on both Discourse and Discord. If you'd like to help out with a specific set of improvements to these, don't hesitate to reach out to me or Meike and we can get you set up. Some specific things we're already working on: * Getting Discord verified with a nice URL. * Archives of mailing lists on Discourse so you can search in one place, etc. * See the plan here: https://llvm.discourse.group/t/mirroring-and-archiving-llvm-mailing-lists-on-discourse/61 * Moving Discourse to forums.llvm.org<http://forums.llvm.org>. * Documenting the best way to move to Discourse while preserving a similarly email-focused workflow. We're just adding these for now, but I'd like people to seriously try using them. While IRC has served us fairly well, I think it is one of the bigger barriers to entry. Our email lists are more effective, but also have had serious infrastructure challenges over the years: a constant flow of spam, bouncing for several major email providers, etc. Discourse has very powerful email-based workflows available and I think we should seriously consider moving to Discourse long-term instead of the email lists. I also want to say thanks to all the folks at the WiCT workshop for giving me and others feedback. I was pretty set in my ways around these kind of things, but hearing the kinds of challenges this has posed to people less established in the community was a real eye opener. It takes a lot to speak up like this, and I really appreciate it. I hope this also helps start to address these long-standing issues. Also a huge thanks to Tanya for organizing the WICT workshop and Meike for helping drive this message home to me and doing a bunch of the work getting these things set up. I wouldn't have been able to do it without her help, especially around Discord bots. -Chandler -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: <http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/attachments/20191118/b1a66e33/attachment.html>
Christopher Degawa via llvm-dev
2019-Nov-18 14:11 UTC
[llvm-dev] RFC: Moving toward Discord and Discourse for LLVM's discussions
> > | mailing lists for longer-form discussions are unfamiliar, difficult, > and often intimidating for newcomers > > Um… what? While I know (via my own children) that folks nowadays use > multiple avenues of communication, it’s **really** hard to imagine email > as a **mechanism** being unfamiliar/difficult/intimidating. Moving to a > new mechanism wouldn’t alter the fact of the very large number of strangers > participating, which to my mind would be the > unfamiliar/difficult/intimidating part. > --paulrIn my (18) personal opinion, I feel that email is a somewhat difficult mechanism of communicating, simply because email requires a different and often complex style of formulating an email and etiquette compared to the instant messaging style of being able to send a few worded messages due to the low cost of sending messages and editing messages. The person writing an email would have to make sure that whatever they send is correct the first time since there is no editing of send messages and the only way to keep a history through email is by either the subject or what is quoted. A few benefit of using Discord or other new mechanisms that I prefer to have over just emailing list are code formatting, being able to group people together (devs of x, list moderators, etc), and the ability to casually talk about stuff other than just meta or code related issues. Being able to communicate with other developers casually helps reinforce that the other devs are also human and not just a bunch of coders behind a computer screen that might judge you for every word you might say. On Mon, Nov 18, 2019 at 8:49 AM Robinson, Paul via llvm-dev < llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org> wrote:> | mailing lists for longer-form discussions are unfamiliar, difficult, > and often intimidating for newcomers > > > > Um… what? While I know (via my own children) that folks nowadays use > multiple avenues of communication, it’s **really** hard to imagine email > as a **mechanism** being unfamiliar/difficult/intimidating. Moving to a > new mechanism wouldn’t alter the fact of the very large number of strangers > participating, which to my mind would be the > unfamiliar/difficult/intimidating part. > > --paulr > > > > *From:* llvm-dev <llvm-dev-bounces at lists.llvm.org> *On Behalf Of *Chandler > Carruth via llvm-dev > *Sent:* Monday, November 18, 2019 2:48 AM > *To:* llvm-dev <llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org> > *Subject:* [llvm-dev] RFC: Moving toward Discord and Discourse for LLVM's > discussions > > > > Hello everyone, > > > *Short version: *I've set up an LLVM Discord server for real time chat > (similar to IRC) and an LLVM Discourse server for forums (similar to email > lists): > https://discord.gg/xS7Z362 > https://llvm.discourse.group/ > > Please join and use these new services. They are only partially set up and > still very new, so don't hesitate to improve them and/or reach out to this > thread with any issues you see or things you want to fix. Also, both > services have dedicated feedback channels. > > Do feel free to use Discourse for technical discussions, although try not > to create duplicate discussions (any more than you would between the lists > and Bugzilla) and make sure the people you're having the discussion with > are fine using Discourse instead of the email list. In case Discourse > doesn't work out, we'll collect and archive everything so it isn't lost. > > > *Longer version & more details: *During this year's Women in Compilers > and Tools meeting, folks expressed very clearly that our communication > systems cause a non-trivial amount of friction for new people trying to > find out about, learn, or contribute to LLVM. Both IRC for chatting and > mailing lists for longer-form discussions are unfamiliar, difficult, and > often intimidating for newcomers. While I have long been a fan and > resistant to change in these areas, the feedback from folks at WiCT was > compelling and important for us as a community to address. Even if it means > I have to let go of my precious IRC. ;] > > We talked to a bunch of people and looked at the options out there and the > most promising ones were Discord for chatting and Discourse for longer-form > discussions. Meike and I have set up both an initial Discord and Discourse > server. You can find them here: > https://discord.gg/xS7Z362 > > https://llvm.discourse.group/ > > > There is still a lot of work to be done. Notably, it'd be great for folks > to clean up and improve the summaries for each of the groups in Discourse, > and I'll be asking various people to help moderate on both Discourse and > Discord. If you'd like to help out with a specific set of improvements to > these, don't hesitate to reach out to me or Meike and we can get you set > up. Some specific things we're already working on: > > - Getting Discord verified with a nice URL. > - Archives of mailing lists on Discourse so you can search in one > place, etc. > > > - See the plan here: > https://llvm.discourse.group/t/mirroring-and-archiving-llvm-mailing-lists-on-discourse/61 > > > - Moving Discourse to forums.llvm.org. > - Documenting the best way to move to Discourse while preserving a > similarly email-focused workflow. > > > We're just adding these for now, but I'd like people to seriously try > using them. While IRC has served us fairly well, I think it is one of the > bigger barriers to entry. Our email lists are more effective, but also have > had serious infrastructure challenges over the years: a constant flow of > spam, bouncing for several major email providers, etc. Discourse has very > powerful email-based workflows available and I think we should seriously > consider moving to Discourse long-term instead of the email lists. > > I also want to say thanks to all the folks at the WiCT workshop for giving > me and others feedback. I was pretty set in my ways around these kind of > things, but hearing the kinds of challenges this has posed to people less > established in the community was a real eye opener. It takes a lot to speak > up like this, and I really appreciate it. I hope this also helps start to > address these long-standing issues. Also a huge thanks to Tanya for > organizing the WICT workshop and Meike for helping drive this message home > to me and doing a bunch of the work getting these things set up. I wouldn't > have been able to do it without her help, especially around Discord bots. > > -Chandler > _______________________________________________ > LLVM Developers mailing list > llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org > https://lists.llvm.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/llvm-dev >-------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: <http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/attachments/20191118/b37c2b63/attachment.html>
Sam McCall via llvm-dev
2019-Nov-18 14:18 UTC
[llvm-dev] RFC: Moving toward Discord and Discourse for LLVM's discussions
On Mon, Nov 18, 2019 at 2:49 PM Robinson, Paul via llvm-dev < llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org> wrote:> | mailing lists for longer-form discussions are unfamiliar, difficult, > and often intimidating for newcomers > > > > Um… what? While I know (via my own children) that folks nowadays use > multiple avenues of communication, it’s **really** hard to imagine email > as a **mechanism** being unfamiliar/difficult/intimidating. Moving to a > new mechanism wouldn’t alter the fact of the very large number of strangers > participating, which to my mind would be the > unfamiliar/difficult/intimidating part. > > --paulr >Some cases I can think of here: - unclear how to reply to a mail that was sent before you subscribed to the ML (obvious newbie problem - generally I'd lurk on the web until I wanted to reply) - unclear how to create a partitioned space (new mailing list) for a topic - subscription state/bounce messages/moderation are all IMO unclear if you haven't used mailman before - the volume of traffic on (effectively-mandatory) lists is so high that it requires using mail filters, most people don't use those (A weak +1 to the concern about this change being made by some people in a conference room somewhere - if that's the decision-making process that's fine with me, but it'd be great to know that and have a defined way to get issues on the agenda) -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: <http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/attachments/20191118/8e496c7d/attachment-0001.html>
Denis Antrushin via llvm-dev
2019-Nov-18 15:01 UTC
[llvm-dev] RFC: Moving toward Discord and Discourse for LLVM's discussions
On 18.11.2019 16:48, Robinson, Paul via llvm-dev wrote:> | mailing lists for longer-form discussions are unfamiliar, difficult, and often intimidating for newcomers > > Um… what? While I know (via my own children) that folks nowadays use multiple avenues of communication, it’s **really** hard to imagine email as a **mechanism** being unfamiliar/difficult/intimidating. Moving to a new mechanism wouldn’t alter the fact of the very large number of strangers participating, which to my mind would be the unfamiliar/difficult/intimidating part. > > --paulr+1 here. mailing lists and phabricator are lasts things on my "new contributor's barrier" list> > *From:* llvm-dev <llvm-dev-bounces at lists.llvm.org> *On Behalf Of *Chandler Carruth via llvm-dev > *Sent:* Monday, November 18, 2019 2:48 AM > *To:* llvm-dev <llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org> > *Subject:* [llvm-dev] RFC: Moving toward Discord and Discourse for LLVM's discussions > > Hello everyone, > > *Short version: > *I've set up an LLVM Discord server for real time chat (similar to IRC) and an LLVM Discourse server for forums (similar to email lists): > https://discord.gg/xS7Z362 > https://llvm.discourse.group/ > > Please join and use these new services. They are only partially set up and still very new, so don't hesitate to improve them and/or reach out to this thread with any issues you see or things you want to fix. Also, both services have dedicated feedback channels. > > Do feel free to use Discourse for technical discussions, although try not to create duplicate discussions (any more than you would between the lists and Bugzilla) and make sure the people you're having the discussion with are fine using Discourse instead of the email list. In case Discourse doesn't work out, we'll collect and archive everything so it isn't lost. > > *Longer version & more details: > *During this year's Women in Compilers and Tools meeting, folks expressed very clearly that our communication systems cause a non-trivial amount of friction for new people trying to find out about, learn, or contribute to LLVM. Both IRC for chatting and mailing lists for longer-form discussions are unfamiliar, difficult, and often intimidating for newcomers. While I have long been a fan and resistant to change in these areas, the feedback from folks at WiCT was compelling and important for us as a community to address. Even if it means I have to let go of my precious IRC. ;] > > We talked to a bunch of people and looked at the options out there and the most promising ones were Discord for chatting and Discourse for longer-form discussions. Meike and I have set up both an initial Discord and Discourse server. You can find them here: > https://discord.gg/xS7Z362 > > https://llvm.discourse.group/ > > > There is still a lot of work to be done. Notably, it'd be great for folks to clean up and improve the summaries for each of the groups in Discourse, and I'll be asking various people to help moderate on both Discourse and Discord. If you'd like to help out with a specific set of improvements to these, don't hesitate to reach out to me or Meike and we can get you set up. Some specific things we're already working on: > > * Getting Discord verified with a nice URL. > * Archives of mailing lists on Discourse so you can search in one place, etc. > > o See the plan here: https://llvm.discourse.group/t/mirroring-and-archiving-llvm-mailing-lists-on-discourse/61 > > * Moving Discourse to forums.llvm.org <http://forums.llvm.org>. > * Documenting the best way to move to Discourse while preserving a similarly email-focused workflow. > > > We're just adding these for now, but I'd like people to seriously try using them. While IRC has served us fairly well, I think it is one of the bigger barriers to entry. Our email lists are more effective, but also have had serious infrastructure challenges over the years: a constant flow of spam, bouncing for several major email providers, etc. Discourse has very powerful email-based workflows available and I think we should seriously consider moving to Discourse long-term instead of the email lists. > > I also want to say thanks to all the folks at the WiCT workshop for giving me and others feedback. I was pretty set in my ways around these kind of things, but hearing the kinds of challenges this has posed to people less established in the community was a real eye opener. It takes a lot to speak up like this, and I really appreciate it. I hope this also helps start to address these long-standing issues. Also a huge thanks to Tanya for organizing the WICT workshop and Meike for helping drive this message home to me and doing a bunch of the work getting these things set up. I wouldn't have been able to do it without her help, especially around Discord bots. > > -Chandler > > > _______________________________________________ > LLVM Developers mailing list > llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org > https://lists.llvm.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/llvm-dev >
Kristina Brooks via llvm-dev
2019-Nov-18 15:29 UTC
[llvm-dev] RFC: Moving toward Discord and Discourse for LLVM's discussions
While I understand the difficulty regarding mailing lists especially if one isn't used to setting up mailboxes and filters to classify and label emails and do think a web forum may be easier to use, I would have concerns over Discord. Unlike IRC which has a fairly open protocol and many clients and open source server implementations, Discord is fairly hostile towards 3rd party clients, and has a concerning history with regards to privacy. While that may not be a concern for public channels, private messages are another matter entirely. The protocol isn't entirely friendly and is relatively new, which makes it inflexible to use compared to IRC. IRC clients are easy to leave in tmux sessions and reconnect, as opposed to Discord where something akin to a web browser is required for a somewhat stable client and 3rd party clients, aside from stability issues, are flat out against the terms of service (even if this aspect isn't actively enforced). On top of that there are too many out of scope features related to software project development, with Discord being far more than a transit provider, unlike what a lot of IRC networks are classed under. So as far as Discord goes, very strong -1 in my opinion. On Mon, Nov 18, 2019 at 7:48 AM Chandler Carruth via llvm-dev <llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org> wrote:> > Hello everyone, > > Short version: > I've set up an LLVM Discord server for real time chat (similar to IRC) and an LLVM Discourse server for forums (similar to email lists): > https://discord.gg/xS7Z362 > https://llvm.discourse.group/ > > Please join and use these new services. They are only partially set up and still very new, so don't hesitate to improve them and/or reach out to this thread with any issues you see or things you want to fix. Also, both services have dedicated feedback channels. > > Do feel free to use Discourse for technical discussions, although try not to create duplicate discussions (any more than you would between the lists and Bugzilla) and make sure the people you're having the discussion with are fine using Discourse instead of the email list. In case Discourse doesn't work out, we'll collect and archive everything so it isn't lost. > > Longer version & more details: > During this year's Women in Compilers and Tools meeting, folks expressed very clearly that our communication systems cause a non-trivial amount of friction for new people trying to find out about, learn, or contribute to LLVM. Both IRC for chatting and mailing lists for longer-form discussions are unfamiliar, difficult, and often intimidating for newcomers. While I have long been a fan and resistant to change in these areas, the feedback from folks at WiCT was compelling and important for us as a community to address. Even if it means I have to let go of my precious IRC. ;] > > We talked to a bunch of people and looked at the options out there and the most promising ones were Discord for chatting and Discourse for longer-form discussions. Meike and I have set up both an initial Discord and Discourse server. You can find them here: > https://discord.gg/xS7Z362 > https://llvm.discourse.group/ > > There is still a lot of work to be done. Notably, it'd be great for folks to clean up and improve the summaries for each of the groups in Discourse, and I'll be asking various people to help moderate on both Discourse and Discord. If you'd like to help out with a specific set of improvements to these, don't hesitate to reach out to me or Meike and we can get you set up. Some specific things we're already working on: > > Getting Discord verified with a nice URL. > Archives of mailing lists on Discourse so you can search in one place, etc. > > See the plan here: https://llvm.discourse.group/t/mirroring-and-archiving-llvm-mailing-lists-on-discourse/61 > > Moving Discourse to forums.llvm.org. > Documenting the best way to move to Discourse while preserving a similarly email-focused workflow. > > > We're just adding these for now, but I'd like people to seriously try using them. While IRC has served us fairly well, I think it is one of the bigger barriers to entry. Our email lists are more effective, but also have had serious infrastructure challenges over the years: a constant flow of spam, bouncing for several major email providers, etc. Discourse has very powerful email-based workflows available and I think we should seriously consider moving to Discourse long-term instead of the email lists. > > I also want to say thanks to all the folks at the WiCT workshop for giving me and others feedback. I was pretty set in my ways around these kind of things, but hearing the kinds of challenges this has posed to people less established in the community was a real eye opener. It takes a lot to speak up like this, and I really appreciate it. I hope this also helps start to address these long-standing issues. Also a huge thanks to Tanya for organizing the WICT workshop and Meike for helping drive this message home to me and doing a bunch of the work getting these things set up. I wouldn't have been able to do it without her help, especially around Discord bots. > > -Chandler > _______________________________________________ > LLVM Developers mailing list > llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org > https://lists.llvm.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/llvm-dev
Gaier, Bjoern via llvm-dev
2019-Nov-18 15:42 UTC
[llvm-dev] RFC: Moving toward Discord and Discourse for LLVM's discussions
Hey :/ It is weird for me to write something to this subject, because... as an newbie I kinda feel like not being 'allowed' to do so. I'm following the mailing list for quite a while and usually use it to ask questions. I'm not sure how to become a bigger part of the LLVM and if I'm suitable for it... I often use Discord to stay in touch with friends and for my hobby (Furries) - however, I joined exactly one programming related server about Box2D (a physics library) , again to ask questions. I found it pretty difficult to use Discord for that, because there was one channel for asking questions. So I posted my question, but the next reply was to the previous subject, burying my question directly. So I think... this was bad :/ Sometimes you were lucky that people dug out your old questions but... that rarely happened. Also the general chats were kinda silent... Since I'm only asking questions here, I would like a system where questions are not being drowned by other discussions and the mailing list kinda works for me. Sure, after a while my message might be buried as well, but it takes longer then in Discord. Also the titles help me deciding if the subject is of interest for me or not... Maybe that helped? Sorry if not >o< -----Original Message----- From: llvm-dev <llvm-dev-bounces at lists.llvm.org> On Behalf Of Kristina Brooks via llvm-dev Sent: 18 November 2019 16:29 To: Chandler Carruth <chandlerc at gmail.com> Cc: llvm-dev <llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org> Subject: Re: [llvm-dev] RFC: Moving toward Discord and Discourse for LLVM's discussions While I understand the difficulty regarding mailing lists especially if one isn't used to setting up mailboxes and filters to classify and label emails and do think a web forum may be easier to use, I would have concerns over Discord. Unlike IRC which has a fairly open protocol and many clients and open source server implementations, Discord is fairly hostile towards 3rd party clients, and has a concerning history with regards to privacy. While that may not be a concern for public channels, private messages are another matter entirely. The protocol isn't entirely friendly and is relatively new, which makes it inflexible to use compared to IRC. IRC clients are easy to leave in tmux sessions and reconnect, as opposed to Discord where something akin to a web browser is required for a somewhat stable client and 3rd party clients, aside from stability issues, are flat out against the terms of service (even if this aspect isn't actively enforced). On top of that there are too many out of scope features related to software project development, with Discord being far more than a transit provider, unlike what a lot of IRC networks are classed under. So as far as Discord goes, very strong -1 in my opinion. On Mon, Nov 18, 2019 at 7:48 AM Chandler Carruth via llvm-dev <llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org> wrote:> > Hello everyone, > > Short version: > I've set up an LLVM Discord server for real time chat (similar to IRC) and an LLVM Discourse server for forums (similar to email lists): > https://discord.gg/xS7Z362 > https://hes32-ctp.trendmicro.com:443/wis/clicktime/v1/query?url=https% > 3a%2f%2fllvm.discourse.group&umid=61113acd-2468-4f46-b95e-3368bc108e8e > &auth=b6f66d00f8195cc5198eee21f0dbabe6af0a3180-a7135ce3448aed0736828c8 > badf539d389685869 > > Please join and use these new services. They are only partially set up and still very new, so don't hesitate to improve them and/or reach out to this thread with any issues you see or things you want to fix. Also, both services have dedicated feedback channels. > > Do feel free to use Discourse for technical discussions, although try not to create duplicate discussions (any more than you would between the lists and Bugzilla) and make sure the people you're having the discussion with are fine using Discourse instead of the email list. In case Discourse doesn't work out, we'll collect and archive everything so it isn't lost. > > Longer version & more details: > During this year's Women in Compilers and Tools meeting, folks > expressed very clearly that our communication systems cause a > non-trivial amount of friction for new people trying to find out > about, learn, or contribute to LLVM. Both IRC for chatting and mailing > lists for longer-form discussions are unfamiliar, difficult, and often > intimidating for newcomers. While I have long been a fan and resistant > to change in these areas, the feedback from folks at WiCT was > compelling and important for us as a community to address. Even if it > means I have to let go of my precious IRC. ;] > > We talked to a bunch of people and looked at the options out there and the most promising ones were Discord for chatting and Discourse for longer-form discussions. Meike and I have set up both an initial Discord and Discourse server. You can find them here: > https://discord.gg/xS7Z362 > https://hes32-ctp.trendmicro.com:443/wis/clicktime/v1/query?url=https% > 3a%2f%2fllvm.discourse.group&umid=61113acd-2468-4f46-b95e-3368bc108e8e > &auth=b6f66d00f8195cc5198eee21f0dbabe6af0a3180-a7135ce3448aed0736828c8 > badf539d389685869 > > There is still a lot of work to be done. Notably, it'd be great for folks to clean up and improve the summaries for each of the groups in Discourse, and I'll be asking various people to help moderate on both Discourse and Discord. If you'd like to help out with a specific set of improvements to these, don't hesitate to reach out to me or Meike and we can get you set up. Some specific things we're already working on: > > Getting Discord verified with a nice URL. > Archives of mailing lists on Discourse so you can search in one place, etc. > > See the plan here: > https://hes32-ctp.trendmicro.com:443/wis/clicktime/v1/query?url=https% > 3a%2f%2fllvm.discourse.group%2ft%2fmirroring%2dand%2darchiving%2dllvm% > 2dmailing%2dlists%2don%2ddiscourse%2f61&umid=61113acd-2468-4f46-b95e-3 > 368bc108e8e&auth=b6f66d00f8195cc5198eee21f0dbabe6af0a3180-ecf495cfb4c1 > 9b33b2115bb647dbc85b26fc4ca0 > > Moving Discourse to forums.llvm.org. > Documenting the best way to move to Discourse while preserving a similarly email-focused workflow. > > > We're just adding these for now, but I'd like people to seriously try using them. While IRC has served us fairly well, I think it is one of the bigger barriers to entry. Our email lists are more effective, but also have had serious infrastructure challenges over the years: a constant flow of spam, bouncing for several major email providers, etc. Discourse has very powerful email-based workflows available and I think we should seriously consider moving to Discourse long-term instead of the email lists. > > I also want to say thanks to all the folks at the WiCT workshop for giving me and others feedback. I was pretty set in my ways around these kind of things, but hearing the kinds of challenges this has posed to people less established in the community was a real eye opener. It takes a lot to speak up like this, and I really appreciate it. I hope this also helps start to address these long-standing issues. Also a huge thanks to Tanya for organizing the WICT workshop and Meike for helping drive this message home to me and doing a bunch of the work getting these things set up. I wouldn't have been able to do it without her help, especially around Discord bots. > > -Chandler > _______________________________________________ > LLVM Developers mailing list > llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org > https://lists.llvm.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/llvm-dev_______________________________________________ LLVM Developers mailing list llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org https://lists.llvm.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/llvm-dev Als GmbH eingetragen im Handelsregister Bad Homburg v.d.H. HRB 9816, USt.ID-Nr. DE 114 165 789 Geschäftsführer: Dr. Hiroshi Nakamura, Dr. Robert Plank, Markus Bode, Heiko Lampert, Takashi Nagano, Takeshi Fukushima. Junichi Tajika
Hans Wennborg via llvm-dev
2019-Nov-18 16:03 UTC
[llvm-dev] RFC: Moving toward Discord and Discourse for LLVM's discussions
Since it's an RFC, I'll comment :-) I don't have strong opinions about IRC vs Discord vs something else. But the idea of abandoning the mailing lists is concerning to me. The way I see it, the lists are core to the LLVM project, second in importance only to the source code repository. Web forums tend to come and go, but the lists have been around a long time and seem to be working well. Perhaps we could do other things to make the mailing lists more accessible? When I meet university students, they're often familiar with how to find our code and build it, but much less aware of the mailing lists, and that one can use them to ask questions. Maybe we should promote them in README.md, which is probably the first thing new users would see these days? On Mon, Nov 18, 2019 at 8:48 AM Chandler Carruth via llvm-dev <llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org> wrote:> > Hello everyone, > > Short version: > I've set up an LLVM Discord server for real time chat (similar to IRC) and an LLVM Discourse server for forums (similar to email lists): > https://discord.gg/xS7Z362 > https://llvm.discourse.group/ > > Please join and use these new services. They are only partially set up and still very new, so don't hesitate to improve them and/or reach out to this thread with any issues you see or things you want to fix. Also, both services have dedicated feedback channels. > > Do feel free to use Discourse for technical discussions, although try not to create duplicate discussions (any more than you would between the lists and Bugzilla) and make sure the people you're having the discussion with are fine using Discourse instead of the email list. In case Discourse doesn't work out, we'll collect and archive everything so it isn't lost. > > Longer version & more details: > During this year's Women in Compilers and Tools meeting, folks expressed very clearly that our communication systems cause a non-trivial amount of friction for new people trying to find out about, learn, or contribute to LLVM. Both IRC for chatting and mailing lists for longer-form discussions are unfamiliar, difficult, and often intimidating for newcomers. While I have long been a fan and resistant to change in these areas, the feedback from folks at WiCT was compelling and important for us as a community to address. Even if it means I have to let go of my precious IRC. ;] > > We talked to a bunch of people and looked at the options out there and the most promising ones were Discord for chatting and Discourse for longer-form discussions. Meike and I have set up both an initial Discord and Discourse server. You can find them here: > https://discord.gg/xS7Z362 > https://llvm.discourse.group/ > > There is still a lot of work to be done. Notably, it'd be great for folks to clean up and improve the summaries for each of the groups in Discourse, and I'll be asking various people to help moderate on both Discourse and Discord. If you'd like to help out with a specific set of improvements to these, don't hesitate to reach out to me or Meike and we can get you set up. Some specific things we're already working on: > > Getting Discord verified with a nice URL. > Archives of mailing lists on Discourse so you can search in one place, etc. > > See the plan here: https://llvm.discourse.group/t/mirroring-and-archiving-llvm-mailing-lists-on-discourse/61 > > Moving Discourse to forums.llvm.org. > Documenting the best way to move to Discourse while preserving a similarly email-focused workflow. > > > We're just adding these for now, but I'd like people to seriously try using them. While IRC has served us fairly well, I think it is one of the bigger barriers to entry. Our email lists are more effective, but also have had serious infrastructure challenges over the years: a constant flow of spam, bouncing for several major email providers, etc. Discourse has very powerful email-based workflows available and I think we should seriously consider moving to Discourse long-term instead of the email lists. > > I also want to say thanks to all the folks at the WiCT workshop for giving me and others feedback. I was pretty set in my ways around these kind of things, but hearing the kinds of challenges this has posed to people less established in the community was a real eye opener. It takes a lot to speak up like this, and I really appreciate it. I hope this also helps start to address these long-standing issues. Also a huge thanks to Tanya for organizing the WICT workshop and Meike for helping drive this message home to me and doing a bunch of the work getting these things set up. I wouldn't have been able to do it without her help, especially around Discord bots. > > -Chandler > _______________________________________________ > LLVM Developers mailing list > llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org > https://lists.llvm.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/llvm-dev
Neil Henning via llvm-dev
2019-Nov-18 16:11 UTC
[llvm-dev] RFC: Moving toward Discord and Discourse for LLVM's discussions
The lists are working well for the people who are already invested in the community though - as was identified by Chandler they aren't working as well for new people. I'm an insanely confident Scotsman with just about zero fear of any/all social situations, and I've always found this mailing list to be utterly terrifying (thus I've been a 10 year mostly-lurker). My fear (unfounded as it probably is) is that I'll make a complete fool out of myself asking a dumb question / proposing a stupid idea, tarishing what little reputation I might have had. I know from others I've talked to over the years this isn't a sentiment that I alone feel! So +1 from me for anything we can do to help broaden the community. On Mon, Nov 18, 2019 at 4:03 PM Hans Wennborg via llvm-dev < llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org> wrote:> Since it's an RFC, I'll comment :-) > > I don't have strong opinions about IRC vs Discord vs something else. > > But the idea of abandoning the mailing lists is concerning to me. The > way I see it, the lists are core to the LLVM project, second in > importance only to the source code repository. Web forums tend to come > and go, but the lists have been around a long time and seem to be > working well. > > Perhaps we could do other things to make the mailing lists more > accessible? When I meet university students, they're often familiar > with how to find our code and build it, but much less aware of the > mailing lists, and that one can use them to ask questions. Maybe we > should promote them in README.md, which is probably the first thing > new users would see these days? > > On Mon, Nov 18, 2019 at 8:48 AM Chandler Carruth via llvm-dev > <llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org> wrote: > > > > Hello everyone, > > > > Short version: > > I've set up an LLVM Discord server for real time chat (similar to IRC) > and an LLVM Discourse server for forums (similar to email lists): > > https://discord.gg/xS7Z362 > > https://llvm.discourse.group/ > > > > Please join and use these new services. They are only partially set up > and still very new, so don't hesitate to improve them and/or reach out to > this thread with any issues you see or things you want to fix. Also, both > services have dedicated feedback channels. > > > > Do feel free to use Discourse for technical discussions, although try > not to create duplicate discussions (any more than you would between the > lists and Bugzilla) and make sure the people you're having the discussion > with are fine using Discourse instead of the email list. In case Discourse > doesn't work out, we'll collect and archive everything so it isn't lost. > > > > Longer version & more details: > > During this year's Women in Compilers and Tools meeting, folks expressed > very clearly that our communication systems cause a non-trivial amount of > friction for new people trying to find out about, learn, or contribute to > LLVM. Both IRC for chatting and mailing lists for longer-form discussions > are unfamiliar, difficult, and often intimidating for newcomers. While I > have long been a fan and resistant to change in these areas, the feedback > from folks at WiCT was compelling and important for us as a community to > address. Even if it means I have to let go of my precious IRC. ;] > > > > We talked to a bunch of people and looked at the options out there and > the most promising ones were Discord for chatting and Discourse for > longer-form discussions. Meike and I have set up both an initial Discord > and Discourse server. You can find them here: > > https://discord.gg/xS7Z362 > > https://llvm.discourse.group/ > > > > There is still a lot of work to be done. Notably, it'd be great for > folks to clean up and improve the summaries for each of the groups in > Discourse, and I'll be asking various people to help moderate on both > Discourse and Discord. If you'd like to help out with a specific set of > improvements to these, don't hesitate to reach out to me or Meike and we > can get you set up. Some specific things we're already working on: > > > > Getting Discord verified with a nice URL. > > Archives of mailing lists on Discourse so you can search in one place, > etc. > > > > See the plan here: > https://llvm.discourse.group/t/mirroring-and-archiving-llvm-mailing-lists-on-discourse/61 > > > > Moving Discourse to forums.llvm.org. > > Documenting the best way to move to Discourse while preserving a > similarly email-focused workflow. > > > > > > We're just adding these for now, but I'd like people to seriously try > using them. While IRC has served us fairly well, I think it is one of the > bigger barriers to entry. Our email lists are more effective, but also have > had serious infrastructure challenges over the years: a constant flow of > spam, bouncing for several major email providers, etc. Discourse has very > powerful email-based workflows available and I think we should seriously > consider moving to Discourse long-term instead of the email lists. > > > > I also want to say thanks to all the folks at the WiCT workshop for > giving me and others feedback. I was pretty set in my ways around these > kind of things, but hearing the kinds of challenges this has posed to > people less established in the community was a real eye opener. It takes a > lot to speak up like this, and I really appreciate it. I hope this also > helps start to address these long-standing issues. Also a huge thanks to > Tanya for organizing the WICT workshop and Meike for helping drive this > message home to me and doing a bunch of the work getting these things set > up. I wouldn't have been able to do it without her help, especially around > Discord bots. > > > > -Chandler > > _______________________________________________ > > LLVM Developers mailing list > > llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org > > https://lists.llvm.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/llvm-dev > _______________________________________________ > LLVM Developers mailing list > llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org > https://lists.llvm.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/llvm-dev >-- Neil Henning Senior Software Engineer Compiler unity.com -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: <http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/attachments/20191118/b41de27f/attachment.html>
Robinson, Paul via llvm-dev
2019-Nov-18 16:16 UTC
[llvm-dev] RFC: Moving toward Discord and Discourse for LLVM's discussions
Regarding process...> From: llvm-dev <llvm-dev-bounces at lists.llvm.org> On Behalf Of David > Chisnall via llvm-dev > ... > While I am in general in favour of creating new channels to extend the > reach of the community, I don't believe that something like this that > requires existing community members to participate to be useful should > be launched without a wider discussion. This paragraph in your > announcement stood out: > > > We talked to a bunch of people and looked at the options out there and > > the most promising ones were Discord for chatting and Discourse for > > longer-form discussions. > > Who are these 'bunch of people'? Why were they selected to make this > decision (and by whom)?If this is an LLVM Foundation fiat, we know who the self-selected set are. If this is supposed to be a community-driven thing, I agree with David. This thread is titled as an RFC but it's presented as a fait-accompli. --paulr
Stefan Teleman via llvm-dev
2019-Nov-18 16:39 UTC
[llvm-dev] RFC: Moving toward Discord and Discourse for LLVM's discussions
On Mon, Nov 18, 2019 at 8:49 AM Robinson, Paul via llvm-dev <llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org> wrote:> > | mailing lists for longer-form discussions are unfamiliar, difficult, and often intimidating for newcomers > > > > Um… what? While I know (via my own children) that folks nowadays use multiple avenues of communication, it’s *really* hard to imagine email as a *mechanism* being unfamiliar/difficult/intimidating. Moving to a new mechanism wouldn’t alter the fact of the very large number of strangers participating, which to my mind would be the unfamiliar/difficult/intimidating part.FWIW, I agree with Paul. I can't recall an instance when I had difficulty using, or was intimidated by, email, for saying something on a mailing list. I am very unclear as to what problem this Discourse thing is supposed to solve. Being welcoming, or off-putting, has nothing to do with the form of the communications medium IMO. It has much more to do with the contents and style of the communication. -- Stefan Teleman stefan.teleman at gmail.com
Robinson, Paul via llvm-dev
2019-Nov-18 16:45 UTC
[llvm-dev] RFC: Moving toward Discord and Discourse for LLVM's discussions
> Web forums tend to come and goIf we do have a web forum, better to host it ourselves, then? The few non-computer forums I've used are all self-hosted, which is not always a good thing (one is very creaky indeed) but they survive vendors disappearing, as web companies are prone to do. --paulr
Zachary Turner via llvm-dev
2019-Nov-18 17:26 UTC
[llvm-dev] RFC: Moving toward Discord and Discourse for LLVM's discussions
Can you elaborate on the rationale for choosing Discord over Slack? Obviously Discord is free, but I suspect that isn't the primary motivating factor. For example, with Discord there is no easy way to link directly to a particular post. Search is also worse, and there is less availability of useful plugins such as inserting code snippets, etc. Discord also doesn't do threading, which is a very useful feature that makes communication easier. On Sun, Nov 17, 2019 at 11:48 PM Chandler Carruth via llvm-dev < llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org> wrote:> Hello everyone, > > > *Short version:*I've set up an LLVM Discord server for real time chat > (similar to IRC) and an LLVM Discourse server for forums (similar to email > lists): > https://discord.gg/xS7Z362 > https://llvm.discourse.group/ > > Please join and use these new services. They are only partially set up and > still very new, so don't hesitate to improve them and/or reach out to this > thread with any issues you see or things you want to fix. Also, both > services have dedicated feedback channels. > > Do feel free to use Discourse for technical discussions, although try not > to create duplicate discussions (any more than you would between the lists > and Bugzilla) and make sure the people you're having the discussion with > are fine using Discourse instead of the email list. In case Discourse > doesn't work out, we'll collect and archive everything so it isn't lost. > > > *Longer version & more details:*During this year's Women in Compilers and > Tools meeting, folks expressed very clearly that our communication systems > cause a non-trivial amount of friction for new people trying to find out > about, learn, or contribute to LLVM. Both IRC for chatting and mailing > lists for longer-form discussions are unfamiliar, difficult, and often > intimidating for newcomers. While I have long been a fan and resistant to > change in these areas, the feedback from folks at WiCT was compelling and > important for us as a community to address. Even if it means I have to let > go of my precious IRC. ;] > > We talked to a bunch of people and looked at the options out there and the > most promising ones were Discord for chatting and Discourse for longer-form > discussions. Meike and I have set up both an initial Discord and Discourse > server. You can find them here: > https://discord.gg/xS7Z362 > https://llvm.discourse.group/ > > There is still a lot of work to be done. Notably, it'd be great for folks > to clean up and improve the summaries for each of the groups in Discourse, > and I'll be asking various people to help moderate on both Discourse and > Discord. If you'd like to help out with a specific set of improvements to > these, don't hesitate to reach out to me or Meike and we can get you set > up. Some specific things we're already working on: > > - Getting Discord verified with a nice URL. > - Archives of mailing lists on Discourse so you can search in one > place, etc. > - See the plan here: > https://llvm.discourse.group/t/mirroring-and-archiving-llvm-mailing-lists-on-discourse/61 > - Moving Discourse to forums.llvm.org. > - Documenting the best way to move to Discourse while preserving a > similarly email-focused workflow. > > > We're just adding these for now, but I'd like people to seriously try > using them. While IRC has served us fairly well, I think it is one of the > bigger barriers to entry. Our email lists are more effective, but also have > had serious infrastructure challenges over the years: a constant flow of > spam, bouncing for several major email providers, etc. Discourse has very > powerful email-based workflows available and I think we should seriously > consider moving to Discourse long-term instead of the email lists. > > I also want to say thanks to all the folks at the WiCT workshop for giving > me and others feedback. I was pretty set in my ways around these kind of > things, but hearing the kinds of challenges this has posed to people less > established in the community was a real eye opener. It takes a lot to speak > up like this, and I really appreciate it. I hope this also helps start to > address these long-standing issues. Also a huge thanks to Tanya for > organizing the WICT workshop and Meike for helping drive this message home > to me and doing a bunch of the work getting these things set up. I wouldn't > have been able to do it without her help, especially around Discord bots. > > -Chandler > _______________________________________________ > LLVM Developers mailing list > llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org > https://lists.llvm.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/llvm-dev >-------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: <http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/attachments/20191118/15c56821/attachment.html>
Christopher Degawa via llvm-dev
2019-Nov-18 17:47 UTC
[llvm-dev] RFC: Moving toward Discord and Discourse for LLVM's discussions
> Perhaps we could do other things to make the mailing lists more > accessible? When I meet university students, they're often familiar > with how to find our code and build it, but much less aware of the > mailing lists, and that one can use them to ask questions. Maybe we > should promote them in README.md, which is probably the first thing > new users would see these days?In addition to promoting the mailing lists, it would probably be beneficial to add at least a mention or a link to the contributing guide too since the only link relating to how to contribute is "http://reviews.llvm.org/" inside the sub-header, which most people gloss over and a link directly to the Phabricator is one of the least helpful way to direct a potential contributor from GitHub (especially if they don't know where to start in Phabricator). Either adding a link to https://llvm.org/docs/Contributing.html or adding the contents of it to the README.md would help a lot more than requiring the contributor to google "llvm contributing" On Mon, Nov 18, 2019 at 11:04 AM Hans Wennborg via llvm-dev < llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org> wrote:> Since it's an RFC, I'll comment :-) > > I don't have strong opinions about IRC vs Discord vs something else. > > But the idea of abandoning the mailing lists is concerning to me. The > way I see it, the lists are core to the LLVM project, second in > importance only to the source code repository. Web forums tend to come > and go, but the lists have been around a long time and seem to be > working well. > > Perhaps we could do other things to make the mailing lists more > accessible? When I meet university students, they're often familiar > with how to find our code and build it, but much less aware of the > mailing lists, and that one can use them to ask questions. Maybe we > should promote them in README.md, which is probably the first thing > new users would see these days? > > On Mon, Nov 18, 2019 at 8:48 AM Chandler Carruth via llvm-dev > <llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org> wrote: > > > > Hello everyone, > > > > Short version: > > I've set up an LLVM Discord server for real time chat (similar to IRC) > and an LLVM Discourse server for forums (similar to email lists): > > https://discord.gg/xS7Z362 > > https://llvm.discourse.group/ > > > > Please join and use these new services. They are only partially set up > and still very new, so don't hesitate to improve them and/or reach out to > this thread with any issues you see or things you want to fix. Also, both > services have dedicated feedback channels. > > > > Do feel free to use Discourse for technical discussions, although try > not to create duplicate discussions (any more than you would between the > lists and Bugzilla) and make sure the people you're having the discussion > with are fine using Discourse instead of the email list. In case Discourse > doesn't work out, we'll collect and archive everything so it isn't lost. > > > > Longer version & more details: > > During this year's Women in Compilers and Tools meeting, folks expressed > very clearly that our communication systems cause a non-trivial amount of > friction for new people trying to find out about, learn, or contribute to > LLVM. Both IRC for chatting and mailing lists for longer-form discussions > are unfamiliar, difficult, and often intimidating for newcomers. While I > have long been a fan and resistant to change in these areas, the feedback > from folks at WiCT was compelling and important for us as a community to > address. Even if it means I have to let go of my precious IRC. ;] > > > > We talked to a bunch of people and looked at the options out there and > the most promising ones were Discord for chatting and Discourse for > longer-form discussions. Meike and I have set up both an initial Discord > and Discourse server. You can find them here: > > https://discord.gg/xS7Z362 > > https://llvm.discourse.group/ > > > > There is still a lot of work to be done. Notably, it'd be great for > folks to clean up and improve the summaries for each of the groups in > Discourse, and I'll be asking various people to help moderate on both > Discourse and Discord. If you'd like to help out with a specific set of > improvements to these, don't hesitate to reach out to me or Meike and we > can get you set up. Some specific things we're already working on: > > > > Getting Discord verified with a nice URL. > > Archives of mailing lists on Discourse so you can search in one place, > etc. > > > > See the plan here: > https://llvm.discourse.group/t/mirroring-and-archiving-llvm-mailing-lists-on-discourse/61 > > > > Moving Discourse to forums.llvm.org. > > Documenting the best way to move to Discourse while preserving a > similarly email-focused workflow. > > > > > > We're just adding these for now, but I'd like people to seriously try > using them. While IRC has served us fairly well, I think it is one of the > bigger barriers to entry. Our email lists are more effective, but also have > had serious infrastructure challenges over the years: a constant flow of > spam, bouncing for several major email providers, etc. Discourse has very > powerful email-based workflows available and I think we should seriously > consider moving to Discourse long-term instead of the email lists. > > > > I also want to say thanks to all the folks at the WiCT workshop for > giving me and others feedback. I was pretty set in my ways around these > kind of things, but hearing the kinds of challenges this has posed to > people less established in the community was a real eye opener. It takes a > lot to speak up like this, and I really appreciate it. I hope this also > helps start to address these long-standing issues. Also a huge thanks to > Tanya for organizing the WICT workshop and Meike for helping drive this > message home to me and doing a bunch of the work getting these things set > up. I wouldn't have been able to do it without her help, especially around > Discord bots. > > > > -Chandler > > _______________________________________________ > > LLVM Developers mailing list > > llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org > > https://lists.llvm.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/llvm-dev > _______________________________________________ > LLVM Developers mailing list > llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org > https://lists.llvm.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/llvm-dev >-------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: <http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/attachments/20191118/6e76f261/attachment.html>
Sam Kerner via llvm-dev
2019-Nov-18 17:47 UTC
[llvm-dev] RFC: Moving toward Discord and Discourse for LLVM's discussions
On Mon, Nov 18, 2019 at 2:48 AM Chandler Carruth via llvm-dev <llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org> wrote:> > Hello everyone, > > Short version: > I've set up an LLVM Discord server for real time chat (similar to IRC) and an LLVM Discourse server for forums (similar to email lists): > https://discord.gg/xS7Z362 > https://llvm.discourse.group/ > > Please join and use these new services. They are only partially set up and still very new, so don't hesitate to improve them and/or reach out to this thread with any issues you see or things you want to fix. Also, both services have dedicated feedback channels. > > Do feel free to use Discourse for technical discussions, although try not to create duplicate discussions (any more than you would between the lists and Bugzilla) and make sure the people you're having the discussion with are fine using Discourse instead of the email list. In case Discourse doesn't work out, we'll collect and archive everything so it isn't lost.Are there any existing open source projects that use these systems? Do they use them as a substitute for the mailing list, or as a supplement for people who wish to avoid email?
Christopher Degawa via llvm-dev
2019-Nov-18 17:53 UTC
[llvm-dev] RFC: Moving toward Discord and Discourse for LLVM's discussions
> > For example, with Discord there is no easy way to link directly to a > particular post. Search is also worse, and there is less availability of > useful plugins such as inserting code snippets, etc. Discord also doesn't > do threading, which is a very useful feature that makes communication > easier.Actually, for Discord, it is possible to quote someone using the `> For example, ....` format or by clicking the triple dot next to a message and clicking "Copy Link" which results in something like https://discordapp.com/channels/636084430946959380/642340762620657675/645977260246958081 https://support.discordapp.com/hc/en-us/articles/210298617-Markdown-Text-101-Chat-Formatting-Bold-Italic-Underline- "CODE BLOCKS" "BLOCK QUOTES" On Mon, Nov 18, 2019 at 12:27 PM Zachary Turner via llvm-dev < llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org> wrote:> Can you elaborate on the rationale for choosing Discord over Slack? > Obviously Discord is free, but I suspect that isn't the primary motivating > factor. > > For example, with Discord there is no easy way to link directly to a > particular post. Search is also worse, and there is less availability of > useful plugins such as inserting code snippets, etc. Discord also doesn't > do threading, which is a very useful feature that makes communication > easier. > > > On Sun, Nov 17, 2019 at 11:48 PM Chandler Carruth via llvm-dev < > llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org> wrote: > >> Hello everyone, >> >> >> *Short version:*I've set up an LLVM Discord server for real time chat >> (similar to IRC) and an LLVM Discourse server for forums (similar to email >> lists): >> https://discord.gg/xS7Z362 >> https://llvm.discourse.group/ >> >> Please join and use these new services. They are only partially set up >> and still very new, so don't hesitate to improve them and/or reach out to >> this thread with any issues you see or things you want to fix. Also, both >> services have dedicated feedback channels. >> >> Do feel free to use Discourse for technical discussions, although try not >> to create duplicate discussions (any more than you would between the lists >> and Bugzilla) and make sure the people you're having the discussion with >> are fine using Discourse instead of the email list. In case Discourse >> doesn't work out, we'll collect and archive everything so it isn't lost. >> >> >> *Longer version & more details:*During this year's Women in Compilers >> and Tools meeting, folks expressed very clearly that our communication >> systems cause a non-trivial amount of friction for new people trying to >> find out about, learn, or contribute to LLVM. Both IRC for chatting and >> mailing lists for longer-form discussions are unfamiliar, difficult, and >> often intimidating for newcomers. While I have long been a fan and >> resistant to change in these areas, the feedback from folks at WiCT was >> compelling and important for us as a community to address. Even if it means >> I have to let go of my precious IRC. ;] >> >> We talked to a bunch of people and looked at the options out there and >> the most promising ones were Discord for chatting and Discourse for >> longer-form discussions. Meike and I have set up both an initial Discord >> and Discourse server. You can find them here: >> https://discord.gg/xS7Z362 >> https://llvm.discourse.group/ >> >> There is still a lot of work to be done. Notably, it'd be great for folks >> to clean up and improve the summaries for each of the groups in Discourse, >> and I'll be asking various people to help moderate on both Discourse and >> Discord. If you'd like to help out with a specific set of improvements to >> these, don't hesitate to reach out to me or Meike and we can get you set >> up. Some specific things we're already working on: >> >> - Getting Discord verified with a nice URL. >> - Archives of mailing lists on Discourse so you can search in one >> place, etc. >> - See the plan here: >> https://llvm.discourse.group/t/mirroring-and-archiving-llvm-mailing-lists-on-discourse/61 >> - Moving Discourse to forums.llvm.org. >> - Documenting the best way to move to Discourse while preserving a >> similarly email-focused workflow. >> >> >> We're just adding these for now, but I'd like people to seriously try >> using them. While IRC has served us fairly well, I think it is one of the >> bigger barriers to entry. Our email lists are more effective, but also have >> had serious infrastructure challenges over the years: a constant flow of >> spam, bouncing for several major email providers, etc. Discourse has very >> powerful email-based workflows available and I think we should seriously >> consider moving to Discourse long-term instead of the email lists. >> >> I also want to say thanks to all the folks at the WiCT workshop for >> giving me and others feedback. I was pretty set in my ways around these >> kind of things, but hearing the kinds of challenges this has posed to >> people less established in the community was a real eye opener. It takes a >> lot to speak up like this, and I really appreciate it. I hope this also >> helps start to address these long-standing issues. Also a huge thanks to >> Tanya for organizing the WICT workshop and Meike for helping drive this >> message home to me and doing a bunch of the work getting these things set >> up. I wouldn't have been able to do it without her help, especially around >> Discord bots. >> >> -Chandler >> _______________________________________________ >> LLVM Developers mailing list >> llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org >> https://lists.llvm.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/llvm-dev >> > _______________________________________________ > LLVM Developers mailing list > llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org > https://lists.llvm.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/llvm-dev >-------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: <http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/attachments/20191118/54ae4ad8/attachment-0001.html>
Robinson, Paul via llvm-dev
2019-Nov-18 18:14 UTC
[llvm-dev] RFC: Moving toward Discord and Discourse for LLVM's discussions
Re Discord in particular:> From: llvm-dev <llvm-dev-bounces at lists.llvm.org> On Behalf Of David > Chisnall via llvm-dev > Note that I don't object to the creation of a Discord server (though the > 'YOUR CONTENT' section of the T&Cs contains clauses that I'm unwilling > to agree to and so I won't be participating),Yeah... "We're calling it Your Content but we (Discord) get to do whatever we want with it and you can't complain" doesn't sound appealing. I was never on IRC so I probably don't care so much about Discord, and even less so after reading their terms. --paulr
Mehdi AMINI via llvm-dev
2019-Nov-18 18:17 UTC
[llvm-dev] RFC: Moving toward Discord and Discourse for LLVM's discussions
On Mon, Nov 18, 2019 at 9:49 AM Sam Kerner via llvm-dev < llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org> wrote:> On Mon, Nov 18, 2019 at 2:48 AM Chandler Carruth via llvm-dev > <llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org> wrote: > > > > Hello everyone, > > > > Short version: > > I've set up an LLVM Discord server for real time chat (similar to IRC) > and an LLVM Discourse server for forums (similar to email lists): > > https://discord.gg/xS7Z362 > > https://llvm.discourse.group/ > > > > Please join and use these new services. They are only partially set up > and still very new, so don't hesitate to improve them and/or reach out to > this thread with any issues you see or things you want to fix. Also, both > services have dedicated feedback channels. > > > > Do feel free to use Discourse for technical discussions, although try > not to create duplicate discussions (any more than you would between the > lists and Bugzilla) and make sure the people you're having the discussion > with are fine using Discourse instead of the email list. In case Discourse > doesn't work out, we'll collect and archive everything so it isn't lost. > > Are there any existing open source projects that use these systems? > Do they use them as a substitute for the mailing list, or as a > supplement for people who wish to avoid email?I don't know for Discord, but the Swift project is using Discourse: https://forums.swift.org They started with a bunch of mailing-lists and migrated to Discourse later, they imported all the mailing-list archives into Discourse itself I believe. -- Mehdi -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: <http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/attachments/20191118/f7bd6b69/attachment.html>
David Tellenbach via llvm-dev
2019-Nov-18 19:31 UTC
[llvm-dev] RFC: Moving toward Discord and Discourse for LLVM's discussions
Hi all, +1 from my side for using "faster" or "more direct" communication channels such as Discord (no strong opinion on the choice of any particular tool here) for informal chats and discussions on a "support level". This is includes user questions but also questions that can be easily answered using community knowledge. I think of things like "How to I build clang for option abc" or "How do I access all instructions in a basic block?" Strong -1 for any attempts to replace the mailing list (but no strong opinion on providing additional possibilities to interact with it, such as mirrored forums etc.) as primary and definitive communication channel. It should be absolutely enough to follow llvm-dev to be completely informed about any major RFC, discussion or design decisions. David> On 18. Nov 2019, at 08:48, Chandler Carruth via llvm-dev <llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org> wrote: > > Hello everyone, > > Short version: > I've set up an LLVM Discord server for real time chat (similar to IRC) and an LLVM Discourse server for forums (similar to email lists): > https://discord.gg/xS7Z362 <https://discord.gg/xS7Z362> > https://llvm.discourse.group/ <https://llvm.discourse.group/> > > Please join and use these new services. They are only partially set up and still very new, so don't hesitate to improve them and/or reach out to this thread with any issues you see or things you want to fix. Also, both services have dedicated feedback channels. > > Do feel free to use Discourse for technical discussions, although try not to create duplicate discussions (any more than you would between the lists and Bugzilla) and make sure the people you're having the discussion with are fine using Discourse instead of the email list. In case Discourse doesn't work out, we'll collect and archive everything so it isn't lost. > > Longer version & more details: > During this year's Women in Compilers and Tools meeting, folks expressed very clearly that our communication systems cause a non-trivial amount of friction for new people trying to find out about, learn, or contribute to LLVM. Both IRC for chatting and mailing lists for longer-form discussions are unfamiliar, difficult, and often intimidating for newcomers. While I have long been a fan and resistant to change in these areas, the feedback from folks at WiCT was compelling and important for us as a community to address. Even if it means I have to let go of my precious IRC. ;] > > We talked to a bunch of people and looked at the options out there and the most promising ones were Discord for chatting and Discourse for longer-form discussions. Meike and I have set up both an initial Discord and Discourse server. You can find them here: > https://discord.gg/xS7Z362 <https://discord.gg/xS7Z362> > https://llvm.discourse.group/ <https://llvm.discourse.group/> > > There is still a lot of work to be done. Notably, it'd be great for folks to clean up and improve the summaries for each of the groups in Discourse, and I'll be asking various people to help moderate on both Discourse and Discord. If you'd like to help out with a specific set of improvements to these, don't hesitate to reach out to me or Meike and we can get you set up. Some specific things we're already working on: > Getting Discord verified with a nice URL. > Archives of mailing lists on Discourse so you can search in one place, etc. > See the plan here: https://llvm.discourse.group/t/mirroring-and-archiving-llvm-mailing-lists-on-discourse/61 <https://llvm.discourse.group/t/mirroring-and-archiving-llvm-mailing-lists-on-discourse/61> > Moving Discourse to forums.llvm.org <http://forums.llvm.org/>. > Documenting the best way to move to Discourse while preserving a similarly email-focused workflow. > > We're just adding these for now, but I'd like people to seriously try using them. While IRC has served us fairly well, I think it is one of the bigger barriers to entry. Our email lists are more effective, but also have had serious infrastructure challenges over the years: a constant flow of spam, bouncing for several major email providers, etc. Discourse has very powerful email-based workflows available and I think we should seriously consider moving to Discourse long-term instead of the email lists. > > I also want to say thanks to all the folks at the WiCT workshop for giving me and others feedback. I was pretty set in my ways around these kind of things, but hearing the kinds of challenges this has posed to people less established in the community was a real eye opener. It takes a lot to speak up like this, and I really appreciate it. I hope this also helps start to address these long-standing issues. Also a huge thanks to Tanya for organizing the WICT workshop and Meike for helping drive this message home to me and doing a bunch of the work getting these things set up. I wouldn't have been able to do it without her help, especially around Discord bots. > > -Chandler > _______________________________________________ > LLVM Developers mailing list > llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org > https://lists.llvm.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/llvm-dev-------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: <http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/attachments/20191118/6aa5ce1f/attachment.html>
Mehdi AMINI via llvm-dev
2019-Nov-18 19:47 UTC
[llvm-dev] RFC: Moving toward Discord and Discourse for LLVM's discussions
On Mon, Nov 18, 2019 at 11:32 AM David Tellenbach via llvm-dev < llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org> wrote:> Hi all, > > +1 from my side for using "faster" or "more direct" communication channels > such > as Discord (no strong opinion on the choice of any particular tool here) > for > informal chats and discussions on a "support level". This is includes user > questions but also questions that can be easily answered using community > knowledge. I think of things like "How to I build clang for option abc" or > "How do I access all instructions in a basic block?" > > Strong -1 for any attempts to replace the mailing list (but no strong > opinion on > providing additional possibilities to interact with it, such as mirrored > forums > etc.) as primary and definitive communication channel. > > It should be absolutely enough to follow llvm-dev to be completely informed > about any major RFC, discussion or design decisions. >If your concern is to be able to stay informed by email, then subscribing to the right "category" on Discourse should provide exactly this (everyone can select their notification preferences on Discourse). Is there something more you need that I missed? Best, -- Mehdi> > David > > On 18. Nov 2019, at 08:48, Chandler Carruth via llvm-dev < > llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org> wrote: > > Hello everyone, > > > *Short version:*I've set up an LLVM Discord server for real time chat > (similar to IRC) and an LLVM Discourse server for forums (similar to email > lists): > https://discord.gg/xS7Z362 > https://llvm.discourse.group/ > > Please join and use these new services. They are only partially set up and > still very new, so don't hesitate to improve them and/or reach out to this > thread with any issues you see or things you want to fix. Also, both > services have dedicated feedback channels. > > Do feel free to use Discourse for technical discussions, although try not > to create duplicate discussions (any more than you would between the lists > and Bugzilla) and make sure the people you're having the discussion with > are fine using Discourse instead of the email list. In case Discourse > doesn't work out, we'll collect and archive everything so it isn't lost. > > > *Longer version & more details:*During this year's Women in Compilers and > Tools meeting, folks expressed very clearly that our communication systems > cause a non-trivial amount of friction for new people trying to find out > about, learn, or contribute to LLVM. Both IRC for chatting and mailing > lists for longer-form discussions are unfamiliar, difficult, and often > intimidating for newcomers. While I have long been a fan and resistant to > change in these areas, the feedback from folks at WiCT was compelling and > important for us as a community to address. Even if it means I have to let > go of my precious IRC. ;] > > We talked to a bunch of people and looked at the options out there and the > most promising ones were Discord for chatting and Discourse for longer-form > discussions. Meike and I have set up both an initial Discord and Discourse > server. You can find them here: > https://discord.gg/xS7Z362 > https://llvm.discourse.group/ > > There is still a lot of work to be done. Notably, it'd be great for folks > to clean up and improve the summaries for each of the groups in Discourse, > and I'll be asking various people to help moderate on both Discourse and > Discord. If you'd like to help out with a specific set of improvements to > these, don't hesitate to reach out to me or Meike and we can get you set > up. Some specific things we're already working on: > > - Getting Discord verified with a nice URL. > - Archives of mailing lists on Discourse so you can search in one > place, etc. > - See the plan here: > https://llvm.discourse.group/t/mirroring-and-archiving-llvm-mailing-lists-on-discourse/61 > - Moving Discourse to forums.llvm.org. > - Documenting the best way to move to Discourse while preserving a > similarly email-focused workflow. > > > We're just adding these for now, but I'd like people to seriously try > using them. While IRC has served us fairly well, I think it is one of the > bigger barriers to entry. Our email lists are more effective, but also have > had serious infrastructure challenges over the years: a constant flow of > spam, bouncing for several major email providers, etc. Discourse has very > powerful email-based workflows available and I think we should seriously > consider moving to Discourse long-term instead of the email lists. > > I also want to say thanks to all the folks at the WiCT workshop for giving > me and others feedback. I was pretty set in my ways around these kind of > things, but hearing the kinds of challenges this has posed to people less > established in the community was a real eye opener. It takes a lot to speak > up like this, and I really appreciate it. I hope this also helps start to > address these long-standing issues. Also a huge thanks to Tanya for > organizing the WICT workshop and Meike for helping drive this message home > to me and doing a bunch of the work getting these things set up. I wouldn't > have been able to do it without her help, especially around Discord bots. > > -Chandler > _______________________________________________ > LLVM Developers mailing list > llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org > https://lists.llvm.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/llvm-dev > > > _______________________________________________ > LLVM Developers mailing list > llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org > https://lists.llvm.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/llvm-dev >-------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: <http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/attachments/20191118/7a08268d/attachment.html>
Dan Liew via llvm-dev
2019-Nov-18 22:45 UTC
[llvm-dev] RFC: Moving toward Discord and Discourse for LLVM's discussions
On Mon, 18 Nov 2019 at 07:29, Kristina Brooks via llvm-dev <llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org> wrote:> > While I understand the difficulty regarding mailing lists especially > if one isn't used to setting up mailboxes and filters to classify and > label emails and do think a web forum may be easier to use, I would > have concerns over Discord. Unlike IRC which has a fairly open > protocol and many clients and open source server implementations, > Discord is fairly hostile towards 3rd party clients, and has a > concerning history with regards to privacy. While that may not be a > concern for public channels, private messages are another matter > entirely. The protocol isn't entirely friendly and is relatively new, > which makes it inflexible to use compared to IRC. IRC clients are easy > to leave in tmux sessions and reconnect,I think "easy" is very subjective here. It is "easy" if you already * Know how to use Tmux (or screen). * Have an always up server that you can have your IRC client running on. * Are familiar with IRC. I think it would be incorrect to assume that every person interested in hacking on LLVM is willing (or knows how to) set this up.> as opposed to Discord where > something akin to a web browser is required for a somewhat stable > clientIs there anything wrong with asking people to use Discord via a web browser? To do many things these days you **need a web browser**. If I compare the easy of use of using a web browser vs your proposed IRC set up, the web browser wins, hands down. There may be a more comfortable middle ground here if there is strong community resistance to using a service like Discord. There are web browser IRC clients that might be considered "good enough" that the barrier to entry is low enough if we clearly document how newcomers can use it to get started in the community. Personally I've not used Discord much but I am going to try it for a few weeks to see how it goes. Dan.
Chris Bieneman via llvm-dev
2019-Nov-19 02:00 UTC
[llvm-dev] RFC: Moving toward Discord and Discourse for LLVM's discussions
David, I'm glad you mentioned Discord's T&Cs. I'm not generally concerned about these kinds of things, but Discord's seems particularly aggressive. Particularly the phrase "perpetual, nonexclusive, transferable, royalty-free, sublicensable, and worldwide license" is... a lot. Since LLVM is a permissively licensed project I assume many of our contributors care about licensing, and that might be a shared concern. Since people have mentioned Slack on this thread, have you by chance looked at Slack's ToS? The similar wording from Slack's ToS is, "worldwide, non-exclusive, limited term license", which seems a lot less grabby. Would you be less resistant to Slack? -Chris> On Nov 18, 2019, at 1:48 AM, David Chisnall via llvm-dev <llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org> wrote: > > Hi Chandler, > > One of the things that came up in our discussion at the WiCT workshop as a barrier for new members of the community was the fact that key decisions are often made at round tables at developer meetings without involvement of the wider community, particularly the large fraction that is not able to travel to the West Coast. More broadly, the opacity of the LLVM Project decision making was raised as something that is problematic when attempting to build a wider and more diverse community. > > I therefore find it slightly ironic that this is being announced after a 10-person discussion at an ancillary workshop that was attached to the main DevMeeting. This seems like a trend in the wrong direction. > > While I am in general in favour of creating new channels to extend the reach of the community, I don't believe that something like this that requires existing community members to participate to be useful should be launched without a wider discussion. This paragraph in your announcement stood out: > > > We talked to a bunch of people and looked at the options out there and > > the most promising ones were Discord for chatting and Discourse for > > longer-form discussions. > > Who are these 'bunch of people'? Why were they selected to make this decision (and by whom)? > > Note that I don't object to the creation of a Discord server (though the 'YOUR CONTENT' section of the T&Cs contains clauses that I'm unwilling to agree to and so I won't be participating), only to the process through which it was set up. > > David > > > On 18/11/2019 07:48, Chandler Carruth via llvm-dev wrote: >> Hello everyone, >> *Short version: >> *I've set up an LLVM Discord server for real time chat (similar to IRC) and an LLVM Discourse server for forums (similar to email lists): >> https://discord.gg/xS7Z362 >> https://llvm.discourse.group/ >> Please join and use these new services. They are only partially set up and still very new, so don't hesitate to improve them and/or reach out to this thread with any issues you see or things you want to fix. Also, both services have dedicated feedback channels. >> Do feel free to use Discourse for technical discussions, although try not to create duplicate discussions (any more than you would between the lists and Bugzilla) and make sure the people you're having the discussion with are fine using Discourse instead of the email list. In case Discourse doesn't work out, we'll collect and archive everything so it isn't lost. >> *Longer version & more details: >> *During this year's Women in Compilers and Tools meeting, folks expressed very clearly that our communication systems cause a non-trivial amount of friction for new people trying to find out about, learn, or contribute to LLVM. Both IRC for chatting and mailing lists for longer-form discussions are unfamiliar, difficult, and often intimidating for newcomers. While I have long been a fan and resistant to change in these areas, the feedback from folks at WiCT was compelling and important for us as a community to address. Even if it means I have to let go of my precious IRC. ;] >> We talked to a bunch of people and looked at the options out there and the most promising ones were Discord for chatting and Discourse for longer-form discussions. Meike and I have set up both an initial Discord and Discourse server. You can find them here: >> https://discord.gg/xS7Z362 >> https://llvm.discourse.group/ >> There is still a lot of work to be done. Notably, it'd be great for folks to clean up and improve the summaries for each of the groups in Discourse, and I'll be asking various people to help moderate on both Discourse and Discord. If you'd like to help out with a specific set of improvements to these, don't hesitate to reach out to me or Meike and we can get you set up. Some specific things we're already working on: >> * Getting Discord verified with a nice URL. >> * Archives of mailing lists on Discourse so you can search in one >> place, etc. >> o See the plan here: >> https://llvm.discourse.group/t/mirroring-and-archiving-llvm-mailing-lists-on-discourse/61 <https://llvm.discourse.group/t/mirroring-and-archiving-llvm-mailing-lists-on-discourse/61> >> * Moving Discourse to forums.llvm.org <http://forums.llvm.org/> <http://forums.llvm.org <http://forums.llvm.org/>>. >> * Documenting the best way to move to Discourse while preserving a >> similarly email-focused workflow. >> We're just adding these for now, but I'd like people to seriously try using them. While IRC has served us fairly well, I think it is one of the bigger barriers to entry. Our email lists are more effective, but also have had serious infrastructure challenges over the years: a constant flow of spam, bouncing for several major email providers, etc. Discourse has very powerful email-based workflows available and I think we should seriously consider moving to Discourse long-term instead of the email lists. >> I also want to say thanks to all the folks at the WiCT workshop for giving me and others feedback. I was pretty set in my ways around these kind of things, but hearing the kinds of challenges this has posed to people less established in the community was a real eye opener. It takes a lot to speak up like this, and I really appreciate it. I hope this also helps start to address these long-standing issues. Also a huge thanks to Tanya for organizing the WICT workshop and Meike for helping drive this message home to me and doing a bunch of the work getting these things set up. I wouldn't have been able to do it without her help, especially around Discord bots. >> -Chandler >> _______________________________________________ >> LLVM Developers mailing list >> llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org >> https://lists.llvm.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/llvm-dev > _______________________________________________ > LLVM Developers mailing list > llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org <mailto:llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org> > https://lists.llvm.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/llvm-dev <https://lists.llvm.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/llvm-dev>-------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: <http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/attachments/20191118/0321ef11/attachment.html>
Matt Arsenault via llvm-dev
2019-Nov-19 03:52 UTC
[llvm-dev] RFC: Moving toward Discord and Discourse for LLVM's discussions
> On Nov 18, 2019, at 13:18, Chandler Carruth via llvm-dev <llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org> wrote: > > We're just adding these for now, but I'd like people to seriously try using them. While IRC has served us fairly well, I think it is one of the bigger barriers to entry.I’m not sure IRC is really a barrier to general llvm work entry. It’s hardly used anymore. There’s a fairly small group of people regularly active there these days, and most people are getting by without it. I do think it would be better if it was more active, or replaced/supplemented with something that would draw more people in. For me personally, the main benefit of discord or something else over IRC is really a workaround for being able to access it on the corporate network. It’s blocked when I’m on the VPN, so whether I’m on IRC irritatingly depends on whether I need to use the VPN at the moment. -Matt -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: <http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/attachments/20191119/81956f45/attachment.html>
Daniel Chapiesky via llvm-dev
2019-Nov-19 06:49 UTC
[llvm-dev] Fwd: RFC: Moving toward Discord and Discourse for LLVM's discussions
---------- Forwarded message --------- From: Daniel Chapiesky <dchapiesky2 at gmail.com> Date: Tue, Nov 19, 2019 at 1:48 AM Subject: Re: [llvm-dev] RFC: Moving toward Discord and Discourse for LLVM's discussions To: Gaier, Bjoern <Bjoern.Gaier at horiba.com> Bjoern said: " I found it pretty difficult to use Discord for that, because there was one channel for asking questions. So I posted my question, but the next reply was to the previous subject, burying my question directly. So I think... this was bad" ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ THIS IS WHAT WILL HAPPEN ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ Well said Bjoern. That and discussions won't be archived or usefully searchable - discord search is horrible On Mon, Nov 18, 2019 at 10:42 AM Gaier, Bjoern via llvm-dev < llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org> wrote:> Hey :/ > > It is weird for me to write something to this subject, because... as an > newbie I kinda feel like not being 'allowed' to do so. I'm following the > mailing list for quite a while and usually use it to ask questions. I'm not > sure how to become a bigger part of the LLVM and if I'm suitable for it... > I often use Discord to stay in touch with friends and for my hobby > (Furries) - however, I joined exactly one programming related server about > Box2D (a physics library) , again to ask questions. I found it pretty > difficult to use Discord for that, because there was one channel for asking > questions. So I posted my question, but the next reply was to the previous > subject, burying my question directly. So I think... this was bad :/ > Sometimes you were lucky that people dug out your old questions but... that > rarely happened. > Also the general chats were kinda silent... > > Since I'm only asking questions here, I would like a system where > questions are not being drowned by other discussions and the mailing list > kinda works for me. Sure, after a while my message might be buried as well, > but it takes longer then in Discord. Also the titles help me deciding if > the subject is of interest for me or not... > > Maybe that helped? Sorry if not >o< > > -----Original Message----- > From: llvm-dev <llvm-dev-bounces at lists.llvm.org> On Behalf Of Kristina > Brooks via llvm-dev > Sent: 18 November 2019 16:29 > To: Chandler Carruth <chandlerc at gmail.com> > Cc: llvm-dev <llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org> > Subject: Re: [llvm-dev] RFC: Moving toward Discord and Discourse for > LLVM's discussions > > While I understand the difficulty regarding mailing lists especially if > one isn't used to setting up mailboxes and filters to classify and label > emails and do think a web forum may be easier to use, I would have concerns > over Discord. Unlike IRC which has a fairly open protocol and many clients > and open source server implementations, Discord is fairly hostile towards > 3rd party clients, and has a concerning history with regards to privacy. > While that may not be a concern for public channels, private messages are > another matter entirely. The protocol isn't entirely friendly and is > relatively new, which makes it inflexible to use compared to IRC. IRC > clients are easy to leave in tmux sessions and reconnect, as opposed to > Discord where something akin to a web browser is required for a somewhat > stable client and 3rd party clients, aside from stability issues, are flat > out against the terms of service (even if this aspect isn't actively > enforced). On top of that there are too many out of scope features related > to software project development, with Discord being far more than a transit > provider, unlike what a lot of IRC networks are classed under. So as far as > Discord goes, very strong -1 in my opinion. > > On Mon, Nov 18, 2019 at 7:48 AM Chandler Carruth via llvm-dev < > llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org> wrote: > > > > Hello everyone, > > > > Short version: > > I've set up an LLVM Discord server for real time chat (similar to IRC) > and an LLVM Discourse server for forums (similar to email lists): > > https://discord.gg/xS7Z362 > > https://hes32-ctp.trendmicro.com:443/wis/clicktime/v1/query?url=https% > > 3a%2f%2fllvm.discourse.group&umid=61113acd-2468-4f46-b95e-3368bc108e8e > > &auth=b6f66d00f8195cc5198eee21f0dbabe6af0a3180-a7135ce3448aed0736828c8 > > badf539d389685869 > > > > Please join and use these new services. They are only partially set up > and still very new, so don't hesitate to improve them and/or reach out to > this thread with any issues you see or things you want to fix. Also, both > services have dedicated feedback channels. > > > > Do feel free to use Discourse for technical discussions, although try > not to create duplicate discussions (any more than you would between the > lists and Bugzilla) and make sure the people you're having the discussion > with are fine using Discourse instead of the email list. In case Discourse > doesn't work out, we'll collect and archive everything so it isn't lost. > > > > Longer version & more details: > > During this year's Women in Compilers and Tools meeting, folks > > expressed very clearly that our communication systems cause a > > non-trivial amount of friction for new people trying to find out > > about, learn, or contribute to LLVM. Both IRC for chatting and mailing > > lists for longer-form discussions are unfamiliar, difficult, and often > > intimidating for newcomers. While I have long been a fan and resistant > > to change in these areas, the feedback from folks at WiCT was > > compelling and important for us as a community to address. Even if it > > means I have to let go of my precious IRC. ;] > > > > We talked to a bunch of people and looked at the options out there and > the most promising ones were Discord for chatting and Discourse for > longer-form discussions. Meike and I have set up both an initial Discord > and Discourse server. You can find them here: > > https://discord.gg/xS7Z362 > > https://hes32-ctp.trendmicro.com:443/wis/clicktime/v1/query?url=https% > > 3a%2f%2fllvm.discourse.group&umid=61113acd-2468-4f46-b95e-3368bc108e8e > > &auth=b6f66d00f8195cc5198eee21f0dbabe6af0a3180-a7135ce3448aed0736828c8 > > badf539d389685869 > > > > There is still a lot of work to be done. Notably, it'd be great for > folks to clean up and improve the summaries for each of the groups in > Discourse, and I'll be asking various people to help moderate on both > Discourse and Discord. If you'd like to help out with a specific set of > improvements to these, don't hesitate to reach out to me or Meike and we > can get you set up. Some specific things we're already working on: > > > > Getting Discord verified with a nice URL. > > Archives of mailing lists on Discourse so you can search in one place, > etc. > > > > See the plan here: > > https://hes32-ctp.trendmicro.com:443/wis/clicktime/v1/query?url=https% > > 3a%2f%2fllvm.discourse.group%2ft%2fmirroring%2dand%2darchiving%2dllvm% > > 2dmailing%2dlists%2don%2ddiscourse%2f61&umid=61113acd-2468-4f46-b95e-3 > > 368bc108e8e&auth=b6f66d00f8195cc5198eee21f0dbabe6af0a3180-ecf495cfb4c1 > > 9b33b2115bb647dbc85b26fc4ca0 > > > > Moving Discourse to forums.llvm.org. > > Documenting the best way to move to Discourse while preserving a > similarly email-focused workflow. > > > > > > We're just adding these for now, but I'd like people to seriously try > using them. While IRC has served us fairly well, I think it is one of the > bigger barriers to entry. Our email lists are more effective, but also have > had serious infrastructure challenges over the years: a constant flow of > spam, bouncing for several major email providers, etc. Discourse has very > powerful email-based workflows available and I think we should seriously > consider moving to Discourse long-term instead of the email lists. > > > > I also want to say thanks to all the folks at the WiCT workshop for > giving me and others feedback. I was pretty set in my ways around these > kind of things, but hearing the kinds of challenges this has posed to > people less established in the community was a real eye opener. It takes a > lot to speak up like this, and I really appreciate it. I hope this also > helps start to address these long-standing issues. Also a huge thanks to > Tanya for organizing the WICT workshop and Meike for helping drive this > message home to me and doing a bunch of the work getting these things set > up. I wouldn't have been able to do it without her help, especially around > Discord bots. > > > > -Chandler > > _______________________________________________ > > LLVM Developers mailing list > > llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org > > https://lists.llvm.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/llvm-dev > _______________________________________________ > LLVM Developers mailing list > llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org > https://lists.llvm.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/llvm-dev > Als GmbH eingetragen im Handelsregister Bad Homburg v.d.H. HRB 9816, > USt.ID-Nr. DE 114 165 789 Geschäftsführer: Dr. Hiroshi Nakamura, Dr. Robert > Plank, Markus Bode, Heiko Lampert, Takashi Nagano, Takeshi Fukushima. > Junichi Tajika > _______________________________________________ > LLVM Developers mailing list > llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org > https://lists.llvm.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/llvm-dev >-------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: <http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/attachments/20191119/10b6269c/attachment.html>
Zachary Turner via llvm-dev
2019-Nov-19 15:07 UTC
[llvm-dev] Fwd: RFC: Moving toward Discord and Discourse for LLVM's discussions
But is it better or worse than IRC in this regard? On Mon, Nov 18, 2019 at 10:49 PM Daniel Chapiesky via llvm-dev < llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org> wrote:> > > ---------- Forwarded message --------- > From: Daniel Chapiesky <dchapiesky2 at gmail.com> > Date: Tue, Nov 19, 2019 at 1:48 AM > Subject: Re: [llvm-dev] RFC: Moving toward Discord and Discourse for > LLVM's discussions > To: Gaier, Bjoern <Bjoern.Gaier at horiba.com> > > > Bjoern said: > > " I found it pretty difficult to use Discord for that, because there was > one channel for asking questions. So I posted my question, but the next > reply was to the previous subject, burying my question directly. So I > think... this was bad" > > ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ THIS IS WHAT WILL HAPPEN > ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ > > Well said Bjoern. > > That and discussions won't be archived or usefully searchable - discord > search is horrible > > > > On Mon, Nov 18, 2019 at 10:42 AM Gaier, Bjoern via llvm-dev < > llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org> wrote: > >> Hey :/ >> >> It is weird for me to write something to this subject, because... as an >> newbie I kinda feel like not being 'allowed' to do so. I'm following the >> mailing list for quite a while and usually use it to ask questions. I'm not >> sure how to become a bigger part of the LLVM and if I'm suitable for it... >> I often use Discord to stay in touch with friends and for my hobby >> (Furries) - however, I joined exactly one programming related server about >> Box2D (a physics library) , again to ask questions. I found it pretty >> difficult to use Discord for that, because there was one channel for asking >> questions. So I posted my question, but the next reply was to the previous >> subject, burying my question directly. So I think... this was bad :/ >> Sometimes you were lucky that people dug out your old questions but... that >> rarely happened. >> Also the general chats were kinda silent... >> >> Since I'm only asking questions here, I would like a system where >> questions are not being drowned by other discussions and the mailing list >> kinda works for me. Sure, after a while my message might be buried as well, >> but it takes longer then in Discord. Also the titles help me deciding if >> the subject is of interest for me or not... >> >> Maybe that helped? Sorry if not >o< >> >> -----Original Message----- >> From: llvm-dev <llvm-dev-bounces at lists.llvm.org> On Behalf Of Kristina >> Brooks via llvm-dev >> Sent: 18 November 2019 16:29 >> To: Chandler Carruth <chandlerc at gmail.com> >> Cc: llvm-dev <llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org> >> Subject: Re: [llvm-dev] RFC: Moving toward Discord and Discourse for >> LLVM's discussions >> >> While I understand the difficulty regarding mailing lists especially if >> one isn't used to setting up mailboxes and filters to classify and label >> emails and do think a web forum may be easier to use, I would have concerns >> over Discord. Unlike IRC which has a fairly open protocol and many clients >> and open source server implementations, Discord is fairly hostile towards >> 3rd party clients, and has a concerning history with regards to privacy. >> While that may not be a concern for public channels, private messages are >> another matter entirely. The protocol isn't entirely friendly and is >> relatively new, which makes it inflexible to use compared to IRC. IRC >> clients are easy to leave in tmux sessions and reconnect, as opposed to >> Discord where something akin to a web browser is required for a somewhat >> stable client and 3rd party clients, aside from stability issues, are flat >> out against the terms of service (even if this aspect isn't actively >> enforced). On top of that there are too many out of scope features related >> to software project development, with Discord being far more than a transit >> provider, unlike what a lot of IRC networks are classed under. So as far as >> Discord goes, very strong -1 in my opinion. >> >> On Mon, Nov 18, 2019 at 7:48 AM Chandler Carruth via llvm-dev < >> llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org> wrote: >> > >> > Hello everyone, >> > >> > Short version: >> > I've set up an LLVM Discord server for real time chat (similar to IRC) >> and an LLVM Discourse server for forums (similar to email lists): >> > https://discord.gg/xS7Z362 >> > https://hes32-ctp.trendmicro.com:443/wis/clicktime/v1/query?url=https% >> > 3a%2f%2fllvm.discourse.group&umid=61113acd-2468-4f46-b95e-3368bc108e8e >> > &auth=b6f66d00f8195cc5198eee21f0dbabe6af0a3180-a7135ce3448aed0736828c8 >> > badf539d389685869 >> > >> > Please join and use these new services. They are only partially set up >> and still very new, so don't hesitate to improve them and/or reach out to >> this thread with any issues you see or things you want to fix. Also, both >> services have dedicated feedback channels. >> > >> > Do feel free to use Discourse for technical discussions, although try >> not to create duplicate discussions (any more than you would between the >> lists and Bugzilla) and make sure the people you're having the discussion >> with are fine using Discourse instead of the email list. In case Discourse >> doesn't work out, we'll collect and archive everything so it isn't lost. >> > >> > Longer version & more details: >> > During this year's Women in Compilers and Tools meeting, folks >> > expressed very clearly that our communication systems cause a >> > non-trivial amount of friction for new people trying to find out >> > about, learn, or contribute to LLVM. Both IRC for chatting and mailing >> > lists for longer-form discussions are unfamiliar, difficult, and often >> > intimidating for newcomers. While I have long been a fan and resistant >> > to change in these areas, the feedback from folks at WiCT was >> > compelling and important for us as a community to address. Even if it >> > means I have to let go of my precious IRC. ;] >> > >> > We talked to a bunch of people and looked at the options out there and >> the most promising ones were Discord for chatting and Discourse for >> longer-form discussions. Meike and I have set up both an initial Discord >> and Discourse server. You can find them here: >> > https://discord.gg/xS7Z362 >> > https://hes32-ctp.trendmicro.com:443/wis/clicktime/v1/query?url=https% >> > 3a%2f%2fllvm.discourse.group&umid=61113acd-2468-4f46-b95e-3368bc108e8e >> > &auth=b6f66d00f8195cc5198eee21f0dbabe6af0a3180-a7135ce3448aed0736828c8 >> > badf539d389685869 >> > >> > There is still a lot of work to be done. Notably, it'd be great for >> folks to clean up and improve the summaries for each of the groups in >> Discourse, and I'll be asking various people to help moderate on both >> Discourse and Discord. If you'd like to help out with a specific set of >> improvements to these, don't hesitate to reach out to me or Meike and we >> can get you set up. Some specific things we're already working on: >> > >> > Getting Discord verified with a nice URL. >> > Archives of mailing lists on Discourse so you can search in one place, >> etc. >> > >> > See the plan here: >> > https://hes32-ctp.trendmicro.com:443/wis/clicktime/v1/query?url=https% >> > 3a%2f%2fllvm.discourse.group%2ft%2fmirroring%2dand%2darchiving%2dllvm% >> > 2dmailing%2dlists%2don%2ddiscourse%2f61&umid=61113acd-2468-4f46-b95e-3 >> > 368bc108e8e&auth=b6f66d00f8195cc5198eee21f0dbabe6af0a3180-ecf495cfb4c1 >> > 9b33b2115bb647dbc85b26fc4ca0 >> > >> > Moving Discourse to forums.llvm.org. >> > Documenting the best way to move to Discourse while preserving a >> similarly email-focused workflow. >> > >> > >> > We're just adding these for now, but I'd like people to seriously try >> using them. While IRC has served us fairly well, I think it is one of the >> bigger barriers to entry. Our email lists are more effective, but also have >> had serious infrastructure challenges over the years: a constant flow of >> spam, bouncing for several major email providers, etc. Discourse has very >> powerful email-based workflows available and I think we should seriously >> consider moving to Discourse long-term instead of the email lists. >> > >> > I also want to say thanks to all the folks at the WiCT workshop for >> giving me and others feedback. I was pretty set in my ways around these >> kind of things, but hearing the kinds of challenges this has posed to >> people less established in the community was a real eye opener. It takes a >> lot to speak up like this, and I really appreciate it. I hope this also >> helps start to address these long-standing issues. Also a huge thanks to >> Tanya for organizing the WICT workshop and Meike for helping drive this >> message home to me and doing a bunch of the work getting these things set >> up. I wouldn't have been able to do it without her help, especially around >> Discord bots. >> > >> > -Chandler >> > _______________________________________________ >> > LLVM Developers mailing list >> > llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org >> > https://lists.llvm.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/llvm-dev >> _______________________________________________ >> LLVM Developers mailing list >> llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org >> https://lists.llvm.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/llvm-dev >> Als GmbH eingetragen im Handelsregister Bad Homburg v.d.H. HRB 9816, >> USt.ID-Nr. DE 114 165 789 Geschäftsführer: Dr. Hiroshi Nakamura, Dr. Robert >> Plank, Markus Bode, Heiko Lampert, Takashi Nagano, Takeshi Fukushima. >> Junichi Tajika >> _______________________________________________ >> LLVM Developers mailing list >> llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org >> https://lists.llvm.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/llvm-dev >> > _______________________________________________ > LLVM Developers mailing list > llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org > https://lists.llvm.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/llvm-dev >-------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: <http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/attachments/20191119/11313927/attachment.html>
Scott Michel via llvm-dev
2019-Nov-19 17:42 UTC
[llvm-dev] RFC: Moving toward Discord and Discourse for LLVM's discussions
Chandler: Why not a stackoverflow tag for CLang developer n00bies? Why a revolution when a minor insurrection would suffice? -scooter On Sun, Nov 17, 2019 at 11:48 PM Chandler Carruth via llvm-dev < llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org> wrote:> Hello everyone, > > > *Short version:*I've set up an LLVM Discord server for real time chat > (similar to IRC) and an LLVM Discourse server for forums (similar to email > lists): > https://discord.gg/xS7Z362 > https://llvm.discourse.group/ > > Please join and use these new services. They are only partially set up and > still very new, so don't hesitate to improve them and/or reach out to this > thread with any issues you see or things you want to fix. Also, both > services have dedicated feedback channels. > > Do feel free to use Discourse for technical discussions, although try not > to create duplicate discussions (any more than you would between the lists > and Bugzilla) and make sure the people you're having the discussion with > are fine using Discourse instead of the email list. In case Discourse > doesn't work out, we'll collect and archive everything so it isn't lost. > > > *Longer version & more details:*During this year's Women in Compilers and > Tools meeting, folks expressed very clearly that our communication systems > cause a non-trivial amount of friction for new people trying to find out > about, learn, or contribute to LLVM. Both IRC for chatting and mailing > lists for longer-form discussions are unfamiliar, difficult, and often > intimidating for newcomers. While I have long been a fan and resistant to > change in these areas, the feedback from folks at WiCT was compelling and > important for us as a community to address. Even if it means I have to let > go of my precious IRC. ;] > > We talked to a bunch of people and looked at the options out there and the > most promising ones were Discord for chatting and Discourse for longer-form > discussions. Meike and I have set up both an initial Discord and Discourse > server. You can find them here: > https://discord.gg/xS7Z362 > https://llvm.discourse.group/ > > There is still a lot of work to be done. Notably, it'd be great for folks > to clean up and improve the summaries for each of the groups in Discourse, > and I'll be asking various people to help moderate on both Discourse and > Discord. If you'd like to help out with a specific set of improvements to > these, don't hesitate to reach out to me or Meike and we can get you set > up. Some specific things we're already working on: > > - Getting Discord verified with a nice URL. > - Archives of mailing lists on Discourse so you can search in one > place, etc. > - See the plan here: > https://llvm.discourse.group/t/mirroring-and-archiving-llvm-mailing-lists-on-discourse/61 > - Moving Discourse to forums.llvm.org. > - Documenting the best way to move to Discourse while preserving a > similarly email-focused workflow. > > > We're just adding these for now, but I'd like people to seriously try > using them. While IRC has served us fairly well, I think it is one of the > bigger barriers to entry. Our email lists are more effective, but also have > had serious infrastructure challenges over the years: a constant flow of > spam, bouncing for several major email providers, etc. Discourse has very > powerful email-based workflows available and I think we should seriously > consider moving to Discourse long-term instead of the email lists. > > I also want to say thanks to all the folks at the WiCT workshop for giving > me and others feedback. I was pretty set in my ways around these kind of > things, but hearing the kinds of challenges this has posed to people less > established in the community was a real eye opener. It takes a lot to speak > up like this, and I really appreciate it. I hope this also helps start to > address these long-standing issues. Also a huge thanks to Tanya for > organizing the WICT workshop and Meike for helping drive this message home > to me and doing a bunch of the work getting these things set up. I wouldn't > have been able to do it without her help, especially around Discord bots. > > -Chandler > _______________________________________________ > LLVM Developers mailing list > llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org > https://lists.llvm.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/llvm-dev >-------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: <http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/attachments/20191119/3a160a4a/attachment.html>
Perry-Holby, Alexis via llvm-dev
2019-Nov-19 17:50 UTC
[llvm-dev] RFC: Moving toward Discord and Discourse for LLVM's discussions
+1 for StackOverflow... Personally, I would LOVE to be able to find LLVM-related Q&A on that platform. -- Alexis Perry-Holby ________________________________ From: llvm-dev <llvm-dev-bounces at lists.llvm.org> on behalf of Scott Michel via llvm-dev <llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org> Sent: Tuesday, November 19, 2019 10:42 AM To: llvm-dev Subject: Re: [llvm-dev] RFC: Moving toward Discord and Discourse for LLVM's discussions Chandler: Why not a stackoverflow tag for CLang developer n00bies? Why a revolution when a minor insurrection would suffice? -scooter On Sun, Nov 17, 2019 at 11:48 PM Chandler Carruth via llvm-dev <llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org<mailto:llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org>> wrote: Hello everyone, Short version: I've set up an LLVM Discord server for real time chat (similar to IRC) and an LLVM Discourse server for forums (similar to email lists): https://discord.gg/xS7Z362 https://llvm.discourse.group/ Please join and use these new services. They are only partially set up and still very new, so don't hesitate to improve them and/or reach out to this thread with any issues you see or things you want to fix. Also, both services have dedicated feedback channels. Do feel free to use Discourse for technical discussions, although try not to create duplicate discussions (any more than you would between the lists and Bugzilla) and make sure the people you're having the discussion with are fine using Discourse instead of the email list. In case Discourse doesn't work out, we'll collect and archive everything so it isn't lost. Longer version & more details: During this year's Women in Compilers and Tools meeting, folks expressed very clearly that our communication systems cause a non-trivial amount of friction for new people trying to find out about, learn, or contribute to LLVM. Both IRC for chatting and mailing lists for longer-form discussions are unfamiliar, difficult, and often intimidating for newcomers. While I have long been a fan and resistant to change in these areas, the feedback from folks at WiCT was compelling and important for us as a community to address. Even if it means I have to let go of my precious IRC. ;] We talked to a bunch of people and looked at the options out there and the most promising ones were Discord for chatting and Discourse for longer-form discussions. Meike and I have set up both an initial Discord and Discourse server. You can find them here: https://discord.gg/xS7Z362 https://llvm.discourse.group/ There is still a lot of work to be done. Notably, it'd be great for folks to clean up and improve the summaries for each of the groups in Discourse, and I'll be asking various people to help moderate on both Discourse and Discord. If you'd like to help out with a specific set of improvements to these, don't hesitate to reach out to me or Meike and we can get you set up. Some specific things we're already working on: * Getting Discord verified with a nice URL. * Archives of mailing lists on Discourse so you can search in one place, etc. * See the plan here: https://llvm.discourse.group/t/mirroring-and-archiving-llvm-mailing-lists-on-discourse/61 * Moving Discourse to forums.llvm.org<http://forums.llvm.org>. * Documenting the best way to move to Discourse while preserving a similarly email-focused workflow. We're just adding these for now, but I'd like people to seriously try using them. While IRC has served us fairly well, I think it is one of the bigger barriers to entry. Our email lists are more effective, but also have had serious infrastructure challenges over the years: a constant flow of spam, bouncing for several major email providers, etc. Discourse has very powerful email-based workflows available and I think we should seriously consider moving to Discourse long-term instead of the email lists. I also want to say thanks to all the folks at the WiCT workshop for giving me and others feedback. I was pretty set in my ways around these kind of things, but hearing the kinds of challenges this has posed to people less established in the community was a real eye opener. It takes a lot to speak up like this, and I really appreciate it. I hope this also helps start to address these long-standing issues. Also a huge thanks to Tanya for organizing the WICT workshop and Meike for helping drive this message home to me and doing a bunch of the work getting these things set up. I wouldn't have been able to do it without her help, especially around Discord bots. -Chandler _______________________________________________ LLVM Developers mailing list llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org<mailto:llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org> https://lists.llvm.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/llvm-dev -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: <http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/attachments/20191119/4e8a9b6b/attachment.html>
James Henderson via llvm-dev
2019-Nov-19 22:07 UTC
[llvm-dev] RFC: Moving toward Discord and Discourse for LLVM's discussions
I personally do not use IRC, and am unlikely to ever use any equivalent replacement in the future, so I don't really care where it goes. I personally don't find the mailing lists hard to use, but I can see some advantages in a forum. If nothing else, the mailing list archives feel clunky to use. I haven't looked at Discourse yet, but I do want to make a few requests, based on my email client and past experience with web forums, that I think should be present in any such software. Alternatively, if it is trivial to make the forums effectively work the same as the mailing list as has been suggested, that would work for me, as long as it was simple to do. Anyway, my personal requirements: 1) Auto-saving of drafts: due to the vagaries of the internet, websites etc, I've had experiences in the past of writing big long forum posts only for something to go wrong during writing/editing/posting etc, causing the whole post to be lost. With gmail, which is my email client for this email address, the message gets auto-saved regularly, so any loss is relatively simple. 2) Easy formatting of quotes and code samples. These are the two pieces of text formatting I'm most likely to need. If a forum doesn't have a straightforward way of writing monospace code, it's basically useless for a programming community. 3) High-quality searchability within the forum. I think this speaks for itself. I don't want to have to search the entire internet for my topic, just the forum etc. James On Mon, 18 Nov 2019 at 07:49, Chandler Carruth via llvm-dev < llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org> wrote:> Hello everyone, > > > *Short version:*I've set up an LLVM Discord server for real time chat > (similar to IRC) and an LLVM Discourse server for forums (similar to email > lists): > https://discord.gg/xS7Z362 > https://llvm.discourse.group/ > > Please join and use these new services. They are only partially set up and > still very new, so don't hesitate to improve them and/or reach out to this > thread with any issues you see or things you want to fix. Also, both > services have dedicated feedback channels. > > Do feel free to use Discourse for technical discussions, although try not > to create duplicate discussions (any more than you would between the lists > and Bugzilla) and make sure the people you're having the discussion with > are fine using Discourse instead of the email list. In case Discourse > doesn't work out, we'll collect and archive everything so it isn't lost. > > > *Longer version & more details:*During this year's Women in Compilers and > Tools meeting, folks expressed very clearly that our communication systems > cause a non-trivial amount of friction for new people trying to find out > about, learn, or contribute to LLVM. Both IRC for chatting and mailing > lists for longer-form discussions are unfamiliar, difficult, and often > intimidating for newcomers. While I have long been a fan and resistant to > change in these areas, the feedback from folks at WiCT was compelling and > important for us as a community to address. Even if it means I have to let > go of my precious IRC. ;] > > We talked to a bunch of people and looked at the options out there and the > most promising ones were Discord for chatting and Discourse for longer-form > discussions. Meike and I have set up both an initial Discord and Discourse > server. You can find them here: > https://discord.gg/xS7Z362 > https://llvm.discourse.group/ > > There is still a lot of work to be done. Notably, it'd be great for folks > to clean up and improve the summaries for each of the groups in Discourse, > and I'll be asking various people to help moderate on both Discourse and > Discord. If you'd like to help out with a specific set of improvements to > these, don't hesitate to reach out to me or Meike and we can get you set > up. Some specific things we're already working on: > > - Getting Discord verified with a nice URL. > - Archives of mailing lists on Discourse so you can search in one > place, etc. > - See the plan here: > https://llvm.discourse.group/t/mirroring-and-archiving-llvm-mailing-lists-on-discourse/61 > - Moving Discourse to forums.llvm.org. > - Documenting the best way to move to Discourse while preserving a > similarly email-focused workflow. > > > We're just adding these for now, but I'd like people to seriously try > using them. While IRC has served us fairly well, I think it is one of the > bigger barriers to entry. Our email lists are more effective, but also have > had serious infrastructure challenges over the years: a constant flow of > spam, bouncing for several major email providers, etc. Discourse has very > powerful email-based workflows available and I think we should seriously > consider moving to Discourse long-term instead of the email lists. > > I also want to say thanks to all the folks at the WiCT workshop for giving > me and others feedback. I was pretty set in my ways around these kind of > things, but hearing the kinds of challenges this has posed to people less > established in the community was a real eye opener. It takes a lot to speak > up like this, and I really appreciate it. I hope this also helps start to > address these long-standing issues. Also a huge thanks to Tanya for > organizing the WICT workshop and Meike for helping drive this message home > to me and doing a bunch of the work getting these things set up. I wouldn't > have been able to do it without her help, especially around Discord bots. > > -Chandler > _______________________________________________ > LLVM Developers mailing list > llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org > https://lists.llvm.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/llvm-dev >-------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: <http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/attachments/20191119/ea0e700a/attachment.html>
Qiu Chaofan via llvm-dev
2020-Jan-02 16:25 UTC
[llvm-dev] RFC: Moving toward Discord and Discourse for LLVM's discussions
Just a FYI, Mozilla community finally chose Matrix as replacement for IRC: https://discourse.mozilla.org/t/synchronous-messaging-at-mozilla-the-decision/50620 Regards, Chaofan Chandler Carruth via llvm-dev <llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org> 于2019年11月18日周一 下午3:48写道:> > Hello everyone, > > Short version: > I've set up an LLVM Discord server for real time chat (similar to IRC) and an LLVM Discourse server for forums (similar to email lists): > https://discord.gg/xS7Z362 > https://llvm.discourse.group/ > > Please join and use these new services. They are only partially set up and still very new, so don't hesitate to improve them and/or reach out to this thread with any issues you see or things you want to fix. Also, both services have dedicated feedback channels. > > Do feel free to use Discourse for technical discussions, although try not to create duplicate discussions (any more than you would between the lists and Bugzilla) and make sure the people you're having the discussion with are fine using Discourse instead of the email list. In case Discourse doesn't work out, we'll collect and archive everything so it isn't lost. > > Longer version & more details: > During this year's Women in Compilers and Tools meeting, folks expressed very clearly that our communication systems cause a non-trivial amount of friction for new people trying to find out about, learn, or contribute to LLVM. Both IRC for chatting and mailing lists for longer-form discussions are unfamiliar, difficult, and often intimidating for newcomers. While I have long been a fan and resistant to change in these areas, the feedback from folks at WiCT was compelling and important for us as a community to address. Even if it means I have to let go of my precious IRC. ;] > > We talked to a bunch of people and looked at the options out there and the most promising ones were Discord for chatting and Discourse for longer-form discussions. Meike and I have set up both an initial Discord and Discourse server. You can find them here: > https://discord.gg/xS7Z362 > https://llvm.discourse.group/ > > There is still a lot of work to be done. Notably, it'd be great for folks to clean up and improve the summaries for each of the groups in Discourse, and I'll be asking various people to help moderate on both Discourse and Discord. If you'd like to help out with a specific set of improvements to these, don't hesitate to reach out to me or Meike and we can get you set up. Some specific things we're already working on: > > Getting Discord verified with a nice URL. > Archives of mailing lists on Discourse so you can search in one place, etc. > > See the plan here: https://llvm.discourse.group/t/mirroring-and-archiving-llvm-mailing-lists-on-discourse/61 > > Moving Discourse to forums.llvm.org. > Documenting the best way to move to Discourse while preserving a similarly email-focused workflow. > > > We're just adding these for now, but I'd like people to seriously try using them. While IRC has served us fairly well, I think it is one of the bigger barriers to entry. Our email lists are more effective, but also have had serious infrastructure challenges over the years: a constant flow of spam, bouncing for several major email providers, etc. Discourse has very powerful email-based workflows available and I think we should seriously consider moving to Discourse long-term instead of the email lists. > > I also want to say thanks to all the folks at the WiCT workshop for giving me and others feedback. I was pretty set in my ways around these kind of things, but hearing the kinds of challenges this has posed to people less established in the community was a real eye opener. It takes a lot to speak up like this, and I really appreciate it. I hope this also helps start to address these long-standing issues. Also a huge thanks to Tanya for organizing the WICT workshop and Meike for helping drive this message home to me and doing a bunch of the work getting these things set up. I wouldn't have been able to do it without her help, especially around Discord bots. > > -Chandler > _______________________________________________ > LLVM Developers mailing list > llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org > https://lists.llvm.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/llvm-dev
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