[Sorry for the full quote, but sometimes, repetita iuvant] On 06/09/2013 11:42 PM, Michael Haggerty wrote: > On 06/09/2013 09:11 PM, Johan Herland wrote: >> [...] >> FWIW, I'd like to express my support for the opinions expressed by >> Jonathan, Jeff and Thomas. They accurately describe my impression of >> these discussion threads. > > I also agree. In my opinion, Felipe, your abrasiveness, your disregard > of project standards, and your eternal argumentativeness outweigh the > benefit of your contributions, large though they may be. > > Writing code is only a small part of keeping the Git project going. > > * Reviewing code is an essential, more thankless, and therefore more > precious, contribution. Therefore the Git project has standards to make > code review less unpleasant and more effective; for example: (1) patches > shouldn't cause regressions; (2) commit messages have to be written to > very high standards; (3) reviewers' comments should be accepted > gratefully and taken very seriously. Almost everybody in the Git > community accepts these standards. Felipe, you do not seem to. The > result is that reviewers' time and goodwill are wasted, and they > justifiably feel unvalued. We can't afford to misuse reviewers; they > are the bedrock (and the bottleneck) of the project. > > * Gaining and keeping contributors is important to maintaining the > success of the project. The mailing list is the main forum for the > development community; therefore, it is important that the mailing list > be a place where people display a high degree of technical excellence, > but also respect for one another, friendliness (or at least a lack of > hostility), and discussions that do turn into flame wars. It is > possible to have a profound technical disagreement without losing > respect for the other side; contrariwise it is NOT acceptable to twist a > technical disagreement into a personal attack, even by the slightest > insinuation. Felipe, in my opinion your participation in the mailing > list lowers the tone dramatically, and will result in loss of other > contributors and the failure to attract new contributors. > > Felipe, I wish that you would devote a small fraction of your prodigious > energy to the very difficult challenge of feeling empathy, > understanding, and respect for the other members of the community. But > if things continue the way they have, I personally would, with sadness > in my heart, prefer to forgo your patches in exchange for the more > important benefit of a more collegial (and therefore overall more > productive and sustainable) community. > > Michael > FWIW, from the meager but I hope not utterly irrelevant point of view of a non-contrib-but-not-clueless user as I am: *a complete and hear-felt +1 on what Michael said here* Until a couple of months ago, skimming this list was mostly a real pleasure, and would often give me some valuable insight on the upcoming features/incompatibilities of Git, help me organize my own workflow as a Git user, and also steadily improve my understanding and command of netiquette in both "generic" mailing lists and Open Source and/or Free Software communities. Now, when I open my mail and get to the "git" folder, I more and more end up asking myself: 1. "What kind of flame am I going to have to see today?"; and 2. "How much chaff will I have to navigate through to finally to get to interesting stuff (if any is actually left)?" *To reiterate:* Sadly, the environment of the Git mailing list has been steadily and slowly *sinking* -- sinking from being pleasant and useful and even "educational", into being annoying and frustrating and often somewhat toxic. I usually jeer and despise he who makes public accusations by simply adding his voice to the disapproval of the "community", but this time, I feel compelled to do exactly that: I do accuse Felipe's *attitude* to bring on and nourish such unpleasantness toxicity. His technical merits and the possible qualities of his patches do *nothing* to remove or quell such issues. Sorry for the extra potential controversy, but sometimes one has to speak up, Stefano -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe git" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html