
I've glanced at git but never used it. I've read that it is more complicated than SVN because it works very differently. I have enough interest in logback that I'd probably do what it takes to get access to the source but I imagine there are others who wouldn't if setting it up is more difficult than just installing a bit of software. I'm not 100% sure what the real benefit would be. Ultimately the code needs to be committed back to logback. How would using git make it easier? Would we be able to commit somewhere that would allow you to commit stuff to the "real" repository? Ralph On Aug 7, 2009, at 6:54 AM, Ceki Gulcu wrote:
If you want to encourage more collaboration and contributions, I believe this is not primarily a technical issue, but more a question of community building. This has proven to be very hard. Linus and Apache have done so. Sun have failed for most of their open source products. For logback it appears that there are around 10 active individuals on the developer list.
Maybe not 10. I believe that any number of participants equal to or higher than 2 is already a good beginning.
-- Ceki Gülcü Logback: The reliable, generic, fast and flexible logging framework for Java. http://logback.qos.ch _______________________________________________ logback-dev mailing list logback-dev@qos.ch http://qos.ch/mailman/listinfo/logback-dev