On 04/30/2015 08:58 PM, Stefano Maffulli wrote:
On Thu, 2015-04-30 at 14:42 -0400, Richard Fontana wrote:
I think this is outside the de facto remit of this mailing list but I would suggest contacting Jonathan Bryce.
My bad, I thought the question was interesting for a wider discussion on list.
I agree - I think it's an interesting topic.
I've always assumed that for community generated content there was no retention policy and there could never be one: repositories come and go, you can't count on some software repository to always be available. So if you need it, you clone it because you can and the license allows you to.
Actually - I think it's worthwhile to point out that we do have a formal policy about this. The OpenStack project has never and will never delete a source code repository, nor a commit from a source code repository. Once you have uploaded a change to our system, it will be there for forever. All of the data in stackalytics and activity.o.o is derived from gerrit, and should something happen to either, reconstructing that data from the original source is completely possible. Also, as stef points out, stackalytics is not currently run by the project, although we do have plans to move it under the umbrella. It does, however, host its source code in stackforge. Also, it stores no data locally - it has a memcached server for caching and otherwise re-calculates all of its data on a regular basis directly from gerrit.
For the data I produce I assume the same thing: it's available as-is, no promise made on its quality or availability. If you want it, you clone it and keep the pieces.
Does that need to be spelled out in a formal policy?
I've contacted Jonathan anyway.
thanks, stef
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