Chris Lattner via llvm-dev
2020-Jun-02 21:04 UTC
[llvm-dev] [PROPOSAL] Introduce a new LLVM process to resolve contentious decisions
On Jun 2, 2020, at 1:57 PM, Kit Barton <kit.barton at gmail.com> wrote:> A few comments on the document: > 1. It seems the current document has settled on using threads on > llvm-dev, however there are still two reference to the LLVM Proposal > Reviews category on Discourse: last paragraph of Proposed Solution > section, first paragraph of the Review Discussion Template section.This was a mistake, fixed.> 2. I think it would be nice to try and keep the proposal document on > GitHub as up-to-date as possible as it evolves based on the discussion on > llvm-dev. I know this was mentioned and resolved on google docs, but > something short like: "The review managers and/or authors will update the > document on GitHub as the proposal evolves during discussions" as > part of step 7, would be good (IMO).Agreed - confirmed and added as an example of this. Thanks! -Chris
Mehdi AMINI via llvm-dev
2020-Jun-03 04:54 UTC
[llvm-dev] [PROPOSAL] Introduce a new LLVM process to resolve contentious decisions
Hey, My 2 cents on this pitch is that I'm +1. In particular, while there are always unknown about how it'll work in practice and I am curious about what will / will not be using this process (the very first pitch mentioned "this proposal focuses on non-technical decisions"), this proposal is addressing a pain point of the community process. The process also does not need to be perfect to be an improvement over the status quo, and in the LLVM tradition: it can be incrementally improved as we learn. On Tue, Jun 2, 2020 at 2:05 PM Chris Lattner via llvm-dev < llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org> wrote:> On Jun 2, 2020, at 1:57 PM, Kit Barton <kit.barton at gmail.com> wrote: > > A few comments on the document: > > 1. It seems the current document has settled on using threads on > > llvm-dev, however there are still two reference to the LLVM Proposal > > Reviews category on Discourse: last paragraph of Proposed Solution > > section, first paragraph of the Review Discussion Template section. > > This was a mistake, fixed. >I missed that this was changed, I was excited about a Discourse category for this! In particular the second point of the doc points at llvm-dev@ being a problem as the current forum for such discussions. If Discourse is a no-go (?), then having a separate mailing-list would seem better to me: if only for archiving/searching/tracking such discussions (but Discourse is much better that the mailing-list archives anyway). -- Mehdi> > > 2. I think it would be nice to try and keep the proposal document on > > GitHub as up-to-date as possible as it evolves based on the discussion > on > > llvm-dev. I know this was mentioned and resolved on google docs, but > > something short like: "The review managers and/or authors will update > the > > document on GitHub as the proposal evolves during discussions" as > > part of step 7, would be good (IMO). > > Agreed - confirmed and added as an example of this. Thanks! > > -Chris > _______________________________________________ > 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/20200602/c8e3cdb1/attachment.html>
Chris Lattner via llvm-dev
2020-Jun-03 17:01 UTC
[llvm-dev] [PROPOSAL] Introduce a new LLVM process to resolve contentious decisions
On Jun 2, 2020, at 9:54 PM, Mehdi AMINI <joker.eph at gmail.com> wrote:> This was a mistake, fixed. > > I missed that this was changed, I was excited about a Discourse category for this! In particular the second point of the doc points at llvm-dev@ being a problem as the current forum for such discussions. > If Discourse is a no-go (?), then having a separate mailing-list would seem better to me: if only for archiving/searching/tracking such discussions (but Discourse is much better that the mailing-list archives anyway).Hi Mehdi, I’m personally also in favor of using Discourse in general, but we as a community haven't converged on that decision. Until a decision is made on that (likely using this process) I think we should stick with llvm-dev as it is the defacto place to have discussions, even given all of the problems it has. -Chris