On 30 Nov 2014 09:28, "Donald Stufft" <donald@stufft.io> wrote:
As promised in the "Move selected documentation repos to PSF BitBucket account?" thread I've written up a PEP for moving selected repositories
from
hg.python.org to Github.
You can see this PEP online at: https://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-0481/
I've also reproduced the PEP below for inline discussion.
Given that hg.python.org isn't going anywhere, you could also use hg-git to maintain read-only mirrors at the existing URLs and minimise any breakage (as well as ensuring a full historical copy remains available on PSF infrastructure). Then the only change needed would be to set up appropriate GitHub web hooks to replace anything previously based on a commit hook rather than periodic polling. The PEP should also cover providing clear instructions for setting up git-remote-hg with the remaining Mercurial repos (most notably CPython), as well as documenting a supported workflow for generating patches based on the existing CPython GitHub mirror. Beyond that, GitHub is indeed the most expedient option. My two main reasons for objecting to taking the expedient path are: 1. I strongly believe that the long term sustainability of the overall open source community requires the availability and use of open source infrastructure. While I admire the ingenuity of the "free-as-in-beer" model for proprietary software companies fending off open source competition, I still know a proprietary platform play when I see one (and so do venture capitalists looking to extract monopoly rents from the industry in the future). (So yes, I regret relenting on this principle in previously suggesting the interim use of another proprietary hosted service) 2. I also feel that this proposal is far too cavalier in not even discussing the possibility of helping out the Mercurial team to resolve their documentation and usability issues rather than just yelling at them "your tool isn't popular enough for us, and we find certain aspects of it too hard to use, so we're switching to something else rather than working with you to address our concerns". We consider the Mercurial team a significant enough part of the Python ecosystem that Matt was one of the folks specifically invited to the 2014 language summit to discuss their concerns around the Python 3 transition. Yet we'd prefer to switch to something else entirely rather than organising a sprint with them at PyCon to help ensure that our existing Mercurial based infrastructure is approachable for git & GitHub users? (And yes, I consider some of the core Mercurial devs to be friends, so this isn't an entirely abstract concern for me) Given my proposal to use BitBucket as a near term solution for enabling pull request based workflows, it's clear I consider the second argument the more significant of the two. However, if others consider some short term convenience that may or may not attract additional contributors more important than supporting the broader Python and open source communities (an argument I'm more used to hearing in the ruthlessly commercial environment of Red Hat, rather than in upstream contexts that tend to be less worried about "efficiency at any cost"), I'm not going to expend energy trying to prevent a change I disagree with on principle, but will instead work to eliminate (or significantly reduce) the current expedience argument in GitHub's favour. As a result, I'm -0 on the PEP, rather than -1 (and will try to stay out of further discussions). Given this proposal, I'm planning to refocus PEPs 474 & 462 specifically on resolving the CPython core workflow issues, since that will require infrastructure customisation regardless, and heavy customisation of GitHub based infrastructure requires opting in to the use of the GitHub specific APIs that create platform lockin. (Note that the argument in PEP 481 about saving overall infrastructure work is likely spurious - the vast majority of that work will be in addressing the complex CPython workflow requirements, and moving some support repos to GitHub does little to alleviate that) If folks decide they want to migrate the ancillary repos back from GitHub after that other infrastructure work is done, so be it, but if they don't, that's OK too. We're already running heterogeneous infrastructure across multiple services (especially if you also take PyPA into account), so having additional support repos externally hosted isn't that big a deal from a purely practical perspective. Regards, Nick.
-----------------------
Abstract ========
This PEP proposes migrating to Git and Github for certain supporting repositories (such as the repository for Python Enhancement Proposals) in
that is more accessible to new contributors, and easier to manage for core developers. This is offered as an alternative to PEP 474 which aims to achieve the same overall benefits but while continuing to use the Mercurial DVCS and without relying on a commerical entity.
In particular this PEP proposes changes to the following repositories:
* https://hg.python.org/devguide/ * https://hg.python.org/devinabox/ * https://hg.python.org/peps/
This PEP does not propose any changes to the core development workflow for CPython itself.
Rationale =========
As PEP 474 mentions, there are currently a number of repositories hosted on hg.python.org which are not directly used for the development of CPython but instead are supporting or ancillary repositories. These supporting repositories do not typically have complex workflows or often branches at all other
primary integration branch. This simplicity makes them very good targets for the "Pull Request" workflow that is commonly found on sites like Github.
However where PEP 474 wants to continue to use Mercurial and wishes to use an OSS and self-hosted and therefore restricts itself to only those solutions this PEP expands the scope of that to include migrating to Git and using Github.
The existing method of contributing to these repositories generally includes generating a patch and either uploading them to bugs.python.org or emailing them to peps@python.org. This process is unfriendly towards non-comitter contributors as well as making the process harder than it needs to be for comitters to accept the patches sent by users. In addition to the benefits in the pull request workflow itself, this style of workflow also enables non techincal contributors, especially those who do not know their way around the DVCS of choice, to contribute using the web based editor. On the committer side the Pull Requests enable them to tell, before merging, whether or not a particular Pull Request will break anything. It also enables them to do a simple "push button" merge which does not require them to check out the changes locally. Another such feature that is useful in particular for docs, is the ability to view a "prose" diff. This Github specific feature enables a committer to view a diff of the rendered output which will hide things
reformatting a paragraph and show you what the actual "meat" of the change actually is.
Why Git? --------
Looking at the variety of DVCS which are available today it becomes fairly clear that git has gotten the vast mindshare of people who are currently using it. The Open Hub (Previously Ohloh) statistics [#openhub-stats]_ show that currently 37% of the repositories Open Hub is indexing is using git which is second only to SVN (which has 48%) while Mercurial has just 2% of the indexed repositories (beating only bazaar which has 1%). In additon to the Open Hub statistics a look at the top 100 projects on PyPI (ordered by total download counts) shows us that within the Python space itself there is a majority of projects using git:
=== ========= ========== ====== === ==== Git Mercurial Subversion Bazaar CVS None === ========= ========== ====== === ==== 62 22 7 4 1 1 === ========= ========== ====== === ====
Chosing a DVCS which has the larger mindshare will make it more likely
particular person who has experience with DVCS at all will be able to meaningfully use the DVCS that we have chosen without having to learn a new tool.
In addition to simply making it more likely that any individual will already know how to use git, the number of projects and people using it means
resources for learning the tool are likely to be more fully fleshed out and when you run into problems the liklihood that someone else had that
and posted a question and recieved an answer is also far likelier.
Thirdly by using a more popular tool you also increase your options for tooling *around* the DVCS itself. Looking at the various options for hosting repositories it's extremely rare to find a hosting solution (whether OSS or commerical) that supports Mercurial but does not support Git, on the flip side there are a number of tools which support Git but do not support Mercurial. Therefore the popularity of git increases the flexibility of our options going into the future for what toolchain these projects use.
Also by moving to the more popular DVCS we increase the likelhood that the knowledge that the person has learned in contributing to these support repositories will transfer to projects outside of the immediate CPython
such as to the larger Python community which is primarily using Git hosted on Github.
In previous years there was concern about how well supported git was on Windows in comparison to Mercurial. However git has grown to support Windows as a first class citizen. In addition to that, for Windows users who are not well aquanted with the Windows command line there are GUI options as well.
On a techincal level git and Mercurial are fairly similar, however the git branching model is signifcantly better than Mercurial "Named Branches" for non-comitter contributors. Mercurial does have a "Bookmarks" extension however this isn't quite as good as git's branching model. All bookmarks live in
same namespace so it requires individual users to ensure that they namespace the branchnames themselves lest the risk collision. It also is an extension which requires new users to first discover they need an extension at all and then figure out what they need to do in order to enable that extension. Since it is an extension it also means that in general support for them outside of Mercurial core is going to be less than 100% in comparison to git where
feature is built in and core to using git at all. Finally users who are not used to Mercurial are unlikely to discover bookmarks on their own, instead they will likely attempt to use Mercurial's "Named Branches" which, given the fact they live "forever", are not often what a project wants their contributors to use.
Why Github? -----------
There are a number of software projects or web services which offer functionality similar to that of Github. These range from commerical web services such as a Bitbucket to self-hosted OSS solutions such as Kallithea or Gitlab. This PEP proposes that we move these repositories to Github.
There are two primary reasons for selecting Github: Popularity and Quality/Polish.
Github is currently the most popular hosted repository hosting according to Alexa where it currently has a global rank of 121. Much like for Git itself by choosing the most popular tool we gain benefits in increasing the
that a new contributor will have already experienced the toolchain, the quality and availablity of the help, more and better tooling being built around it, and the knowledge transfer to other projects. A look again at the top 100
by download counts on PyPI shows the following hosting locations:
====== ========= =========== ========= =========== ========== GitHub BitBucket Google Code Launchpad SourceForge Other/Self ====== ========= =========== ========= =========== ========== 62 18 6 4 3 7 ====== ========= =========== ========= =========== ==========
In addition to all of those reasons, Github also has the benefit that while many of the options have similar features when you look at them in a feature matrix the Github version of each of those features tend to work better and be far more polished. This is hard to quantify objectively however it is a fairly common sentiment if you go around and ask people who are using these services often.
Finally a reason to choose a web service at all over something that is self-hosted is to be able to more efficiently use volunteer time and donated resources. Every additional service hosted on the PSF infrastruture by the PSF infrastructure team further spreads out the amount of time that the volunteers on that team have to spend and uses some chunk of resources
could potentionally be used for something where there is no free or affordable hosted solution available.
One concern that people do have with using a hosted service is that there is a lack of control and that at some point in the future the service may no longer be suitable. It is the opinion of this PEP that Github does not currently and has not in the past engaged in any attempts to lock people into their
and that if at some point in the future Github is no longer suitable for one reason or another than at that point we can look at migrating away from Github onto a different solution. In other words, we'll cross that bridge if and when we come to it.
Example: Scientific Python --------------------------
One of the key ideas behind the move to both git and Github is that a feature of a DVCS, the repository hosting, and the workflow used is the social network and size of the community using said tools. We can see this is true by looking at an example from a sub-community of the Python community: The Scientific Python community. They have already migrated most of the key pieces of the SciPy stack onto Github using the Pull Request based workflow starting with IPython and as more projects moved over it became a natural default for new projects.
They claim to have seen a great benefit from this move, where it enables casual contributors to easily move between different projects within their sub-community without having to learn a special, bespoke workflow and a different toolchain for each project. They've found that when people can use their limited time on actually contributing instead of learning the different tools and workflows that not only do they contribute more to one project,
they also expand out and contribute to other projects. This move is also attributed to making it commonplace for members of that community to go so far as publishing their research and educational materials on Github as well.
This showcases the real power behind moving to a highly popular toolchain and workflow, as each variance introduces yet another hurdle for new and casual contributors to get past and it makes the time spent learning that workflow less reusable with other projects.
Migration =========
Through the use of hg-git [#hg-git]_ we can easily convert a Mercurial repository to a Git repository by simply pushing the Mercurial repository to the Git repository. People who wish to continue to use Mercurual locally can then use hg-git going into the future using the new Github URL, however
will need to re-clone their repositories as using Git as the server seems to trigger a one time change of the changeset ids.
As none of the selected repositories have any tags, branches, or bookmarks other than the ``default`` branch the migration will simply map the ``default`` branch in Mercurial to the ``master`` branch in git.
In addition since none of the selected projects have any great need of a complex bug tracker, they will also migrate their issue handling to using
GitHub issues.
In addition to the migration of the repository hosting itself there are a number of locations for each particular repository which will require updating. The bulk of these will simply be changing commands from the hg equivilant to the git equivilant.
In particular this will include:
* Updating www.python.org to generate PEPs using a git clone and link to Github. * Updating docs.python.org to pull from Github instead of hg.python.org for the devguide. * Enabling the ability to send an email to python-checkins@python.org for each push. * Enabling the ability to send an IRC message to #python-dev on Freenode for each push. * Migrate any issues for these projects to their respective bug tracker on Github.
This will restore these repositories to similar functionality as they currently have. In addition to this the migration will also include enabling testing for each pull request using Travis CI [#travisci]_ where possible to ensure
a way than the like that any that the problem project the the likelhood projects that platform that they the that
a new PR does not break the ability to render the documentation or PEPs.
User Access ===========
Moving to Github would involve adding an additional user account that will need to be managed, however it also offers finer grained control, allowing the ability to grant someone access to only one particular repository instead of the coarser grained ACLs available on hg.python.org.
References ==========
.. [#openhub-stats] `Open Hub Statistics < https://www.openhub.net/repositories/compare>` .. [#hg-git] `hg-git <https://hg-git.github.io/>` .. [#travisci] `Travis CI <https://travis-ci.org/>`
--- Donald Stufft PGP: 7C6B 7C5D 5E2B 6356 A926 F04F 6E3C BCE9 3372 DCFA
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