Peter Dimov wrote:
Stephen Kelly wrote:
I'd be interested in knowing how you would find out which libraries have/need maintainers, and whether you want to 'make a start' at getting that information.
This is actually not that hard to obtain by looking at what repositories have someone with a write access assigned to them.
Can I see that from here somehow? https://github.com/boostorg/mpl Or where is it available?
There's not much interest in this information not because people are actively avoiding it, but because it's only useful if we're going to do something with it.
Ok. Not gathering it in the first place is a great way to ensure nothing can be done with it :). Not knowing what the information is is a great way to have no ideas what to do with it :). To me, the claim that 'about half (60) of boost libraries have no maintainer' together with the fact that, in general, the boost maintenance model does not like 'community maintained libraries' and the fact only 11 libraries are listed in https://svn.boost.org/trac/boost/wiki/CommunityMaintenance points to a self-awareness issue. It also points to the question 'should Boost move more-consciously toward a community maintenance model?', even if only for some libraries. It appears to be what is happening *anyway* without intervention. Anyway, apparently the information *is* being collected. Presumably that will lead to publication in some form. Once the information is available, I'll make some new dependency graphs containing the information. Thanks, Steve.