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Re: [Savannah-hackers] Re: Java pages: project on savannah
From: |
Per Bothner |
Subject: |
Re: [Savannah-hackers] Re: Java pages: project on savannah |
Date: |
11 Apr 2001 14:30:16 -0700 |
User-agent: |
Gnus/5.0808 (Gnus v5.8.8) XEmacs/21.2 (Notus) |
"Nic Ferrier" <address@hidden> writes:
> I'd like you to consider what I'm talking about though. The current
> system is accepting java programs and listing them on our website as a
> service to the java community... it's not making them part of the GNU
> project.
The other parts of this is acting as a clearing-house for the gnu.*
hierarchy of Java package names. We obviously need some kind of
clearing-house to avoid clashes, and we also need a registry of
packages under gnu.*. (Of course packages *not* under gnu.* can still
be GNU software.) At one point I thought that
http://www.gnu.org/software/java/java-software.html was to be that
registry of gnu.* packages. But is it being used that way? Is it
being updated?
In February I sent mail to address@hidden asking whether I could
"have" the gnu.lists package name. I've gotten no answer, so I don't
really know if it ok or not to call my package gnu.lists. I finally
decided to go ahead. I now have another new package containing XML
utilities (for now a parser, printer, namespace-resolver, and xpath
evaluator). This builds on gnu.lists and is in many ways different
from traditional xml implementations. I'd like to call this gnu.xml.
Nic's proposal came about because of a discussion we had about whether
I could/should call my package gnu.xml, and how to "register" the
gnu.xml package. I still think java-software.html or a similar
catalog is a good mechanism, but we need some kind of policy for
how new packages can be approved and added. The address@hidden
list may be a good place to discuss proposed packages, but perhaps
it needs to be expanded to more people.
--
--Per Bothner
address@hidden http://www.bothner.com/~per/