On 05/03/12 23:36, Tim Landscheidt wrote:
It's not only a question of space, but also of availability. I don't know about Debian or Solaris, but on Fedora some packages are sent to a farm up north when they don't compile in the current release and noone volunteers to fix it. I wouldn't want the admins in this case to work on such prob- lems if there is no existing demand.
I'm more optimistic regarding the abilities of the tool- server users - if someone can write "import x" or "use y;" they should be able to copy and paste that to another file. And if they don't, that'd be a nice opportunity to ask for and share some knowledge.
Tim
That assumes they know what they are doing, instead of blindly copy&pasting recipes. I know that's not true for many toolserver users, where we have very valued developers. But I'm sure there is also a bunch of people which copied pywikipediabot following some instructions, and are only experts on its command line. Don't misinterpret me, I'm not meaning that they shouldn't have an account in the TS, or that they are second-class users. It's good to have them on board, each one has its own know-how, very much as not every php coder is a perl guru. But not everyone has the experience to identify the dependencies of what they're doing.
And then, even for those writing their own scripts, having to copy the requisites to a separate file and keeping them up-to-date is a burdensome task. I prefer the autodetection way as far as it's possible (which in most cases looks simple).