
dons:
simons:
Hi Don,
I'm one week backed up on AUR updates.
according to http://hackage.haskell.org/package/numeric-prelude, the last update of that package happened on Sep 22. Yet, AUR doesn't have that update even though the package has been being marked out-of-date, etc. So clearly your statement that you lag one week behind cannot be true, can it?
I'm about 1.5 weeks behind, due to ICFP travel. There are 299 packages in the queue, on top of the 8134 packages that I've updated over the past 2 years.
Hackage is averaging 15 packages a day uploaded now, but spikes up to 30 packages a day. That's getting hard to stay on top of.
You make it sound as if that were a recent development, but the fact of the matter is that AUR has been lagging behind Hackage substantially for the last 9 months or so. It's not "getting hard to stay on top of". Rather, you haven't been able to stay on top of Hackage for the better part of a year.
Well, actually, AUR was up to date on Sep 21.
Please help with tools and processes.
Actually, I think I'm done. I will step down as AUR and Arch Linux maintainer on Monday, to focus my efforts upstream, on Hackage itself. I'm going to release the rest of tools I have in a darcs repo this weekend, and try to document on the wiki any other processes that are active. Most of them you already know about (cabal2arch, the archlinux package, and the support scripts). I'll leave it up to this team to work out if they want to keep supporting: The cabal2arch tool http://code.haskell.org/~dons/code/cabal2arch/ The archlinux support package http://code.haskell.org/~dons/code/archlinux/ The IRC channel The mailing list The blog http://archhaskell.wordpress.com/ The package status page http://code.haskell.org/arch/arch-haskell-status.html The twitter account http://twitter.com/archhaskell The RSS feed http://code.haskell.org/arch/aur.xml The Hackage reverse package map http://www.galois.com/~dons/cabalArchMap.txt The wiki http://haskell.org/haskellwiki/Arch_Linux It's been an interesting 2 years running this stuff, and this group has led the Haskell community to demonstrate how well a distro can support Haskell, particularly through the use of automated tools taking advantage of the declarative nature of Cabal. But it's time for me to focus my energies higher up the stack. Those interested in picking up parts of the work, please let me know. -- Don