
On 29 Mar 2009, at 22:26, Xiao-Yong Jin wrote:
Peter Verswyvelen
writes: Mmm, my email was indeed very unclear about my question.
A very simple example: suppose a development team is working on a program. This program consist of modules A and B. Each module has it's own Darcs repository.
Module A requires B. When a new developer wants to get the source code, he does a "darcs get server://program/A", which gives him only the latest version of A. So he manually needs to do "darcs get server://program/ B" (that B is required is usually discovered after a compilation error, talking to other developers to find out what the dependencies are, or by reading the cabal file). Furthermore it is unclear which version of A required which version of B (so you can't really roll back to old versions).
Now assume you don't have 2 modules but dozens...
I can't imagine such kind of situation, unless you are really working on a very big project.
Really? To me it's almost the way darcs is *meant* to work. Both darcs and cabal work well when you work with micropackages, not one monolithic thing. What Peter is suggesting would make darcs hugely better for dealing with lots of micropackages at the same time that all go together to form a project.
If those aforementioned dependency projects are just some modules within your big projects, I think the way to go is actually make them in the same repository.
Really? Why should we make a monolithic blob out of what are really completely separate things that can be reused in completely separate places?
I can't see the benefit of splitting those small modules to different repositories, apart from not letting other people know your current developing code.
As above – they're different packages, that do something different, and can be used in many different places. It's pure coincidence that those packages were first needed for this particular project.
So my point of view is that it is a management issue rather than a issue of revision control system. The developers should actually agree upon a proper set of API's before you guys actually start building the modules separately.
I don't agree. If it were stable APIs developed by someone else, then yes, it would make sense, but with packages that are built side-by- side with the rest of the project, but are logically distinct, it makes very little sense. Bob