
2014-04-08 10:30 GMT+02:00 Joachim Breitner
we also need a culture of just doing stuff, and less asking for it.
Yes, I was educated in the same spirit but in the FreeBSD Project. I did not ask much for it when I replicated the whole setup just for myself last year.
if you want people to join their builders, tell them what information you need from them and add them. Feel free to modify the wiki so that people find you. Make up some rules (about usernames etc.) as you go, if necessary.
That is good to hear. First, I had the impression from the previous discussions that Ian's solution is not proven enough so you want to go for some other solution. Second, I do not want to duplicate anybody else's efforts. Although I have already stated that I am willing to let others connect to my server and replied the related mails, but I felt that the offer was still ignored or lost. I do not want to be pushy, I do not like stepping on other's toes. But actually I can if that is what you want -- that is how I did eight BSD workshops and developer summits in the last four years and eventually become the secretary of the FreeBSD Core Team.
Just do it. And tell us about your achievements.
I guess the ghc-builds mailing list speaks for itself.
Also worry less about official or not. The Travis setup is not official, but (IMHO) has been useful quite a few times. I'd _like_ it to be official, i.e. hosted on git.haskell.org, but that is not important.
All right, if the rules of game are like that, let it be so...
If your service becomes "critical" in some sense it is still time to move it some official infrastructure... but that can come second, and should not hinder anyone from contributing.
Okay, thanks for the clarification!