Newsgroups: php.internals Path: news.php.net Xref: news.php.net php.internals:73603 Return-Path: Mailing-List: contact internals-help@lists.php.net; run by ezmlm Delivered-To: mailing list internals@lists.php.net Received: (qmail 99159 invoked from network); 5 Apr 2014 08:33:00 -0000 Received: from unknown (HELO lists.php.net) (127.0.0.1) by localhost with SMTP; 5 Apr 2014 08:33:00 -0000 Authentication-Results: pb1.pair.com smtp.mail=smalyshev@sugarcrm.com; spf=pass; sender-id=pass Authentication-Results: pb1.pair.com header.from=smalyshev@sugarcrm.com; sender-id=pass Received-SPF: pass (pb1.pair.com: domain sugarcrm.com designates 108.166.43.83 as permitted sender) X-PHP-List-Original-Sender: smalyshev@sugarcrm.com X-Host-Fingerprint: 108.166.43.83 smtp83.ord1c.emailsrvr.com Linux 2.6 Received: from [108.166.43.83] ([108.166.43.83:35219] helo=smtp83.ord1c.emailsrvr.com) by pb1.pair.com (ecelerity 2.1.1.9-wez r(12769M)) with ESMTP id 4F/F1-16521-7BFBF335 for ; Sat, 05 Apr 2014 03:32:58 -0500 Received: from localhost (localhost.localdomain [127.0.0.1]) by smtp3.relay.ord1c.emailsrvr.com (SMTP Server) with ESMTP id CCA6E50DBA; Sat, 5 Apr 2014 04:32:52 -0400 (EDT) X-Virus-Scanned: OK Received: by smtp3.relay.ord1c.emailsrvr.com (Authenticated sender: smalyshev-AT-sugarcrm.com) with ESMTPSA id 01B1C509C7; Sat, 5 Apr 2014 04:32:51 -0400 (EDT) Message-ID: <533FBFB3.3010808@sugarcrm.com> Date: Sat, 05 Apr 2014 01:32:51 -0700 Organization: SugarCRM User-Agent: Mozilla/5.0 (Macintosh; Intel Mac OS X 10.7; rv:24.0) Gecko/20100101 Thunderbird/24.4.0 MIME-Version: 1.0 To: Kris Craig , Alexey Zakhlestin CC: =?UTF-8?B?Sm9oYW5uZXMgU2NobMO8dGVy?= , Julien Pauli , PHP Internals References: <1396523991.2982.340.camel@guybrush> <1396527638.2982.350.camel@guybrush> <533F9C11.9000303@sugarcrm.com> <688A2215-A79A-417B-8E7A-76CF03DF9F35@gmail.com> In-Reply-To: Content-Type: text/plain; charset=UTF-8 Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit Subject: Re: [PHP-DEV] Branching PHP6 From: smalyshev@sugarcrm.com (Stas Malyshev) Hi! > the gap only widening as time goes forward, it becomes increasingly > difficult to quickly locate active branches of development. There's Here's the algorithm: active ones are named "master" or have one dot in them. How hard is that? That putting aside the fact that there's not so many of them that a person smart enough to write code that should be committed to PHP repository wouldn't be able to just remember them. In short, I'm not sure I see what advantage spending time on removing the branches give us. Their cost is zero, while our time costs more than zero. -- Stanislav Malyshev, Software Architect SugarCRM: http://www.sugarcrm.com/ (408)454-6900 ext. 227