"Olson, Arthur David (NIH/NCI) [E]" <olsona@dc37a.nci.nih.gov> writes:
I'll be eligible to start drawing a pension in mid-2012. Since I'm accustomed to slow-moving Quaker process, that makes it time to get serious about finding a new home for time zone stuff.
There are several pieces of the puzzle (some of which haven't seen much work of late):
Data maintenance Data distribution Code maintenance Code distribution Mailing list maintenance Mailing list hosting Standards work (for example, tweaking POSIX TZ environment variables so Godthab can be represented) Code enhancement (for example, year zero work and Julian calendar work)
Since it's been explicitly mentioned as a suggestion, I guess I'll be one to stand up and say that I'd really hate to see this work move to Sourceforge. The Sourceforge site is riddled with advertising in ways that have gotten increasingly obnoxious over the years, it's slow, it's often buggy, and the mailing lists that it hosts have historically also mangled outgoing messages with even more advertising. In the name of not complaining about something without offering an alternative: Moving from hosting based on the current maintainer to hosting based on another individual may not be the best approach, and I certainly understand if people would prefer something more distributed that makes it easier to have continuity of access. However, I'm willing to host the infrastructure for continuing to distribute and discuss the timezone database personally, particularly as an alternative to seeing it move to Sourceforge. eyrie.org is my personal domain, independent of any employment of mine, and can offer: * Mailing list hosting (via Mailman) * Mailing list maintenance (I'm willing to review the moderation queue) * Data distribution via archives.eyrie.org / ftp.eyrie.org * Code distribution via archives.eyrie.org / ftp.eyrie.org If the number of downloads of the source and data is in excess of a few GiB a day of network traffic averaged over a month, hosting the distribution is a bit trickier, but I think it's unlikely that would be the case. That's over 10,000 downloads of the tarball a day, and I suspect nearly all users get it via distributions or other sources. If whoever is doing the maintenance would like to use a revision control system, I'm happy to host the repository with the caveat that I would like to keep the number of people with access small and restricted to people whose identities I can be reasonably assured about, since I don't have the distributed hosting facilities of a Sourceforge or the like. If the intention is to move to a more open commit model, it would probably be better to explore an option like GitHub, Savannah, or a similar project hosting provider. If the project would stay with a single committer who just needs a place to upload things, I can certainly provide that. -- Russ Allbery (rra@stanford.edu) <http://www.eyrie.org/~eagle/>