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Re: "Write a new package" culture instead of patches?


From: Dmitry Gutov
Subject: Re: "Write a new package" culture instead of patches?
Date: Mon, 18 May 2020 20:50:36 +0300
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On 18.05.2020 20:30, Yoni Rabkin wrote:

     * Associate Emms with several Emms extensions that live only on
       MELPA and that we, the Emms developers, have never heard
       about. This would give anyone accessing Emms via MELPA that those
       extensions are somehow a part of Emms, when they are not.

What do you mean by this?  MELPA is the same as ELPA in this regard:
anyone can publish an "emms-xyz" package, right?

The site, https://melpa.org/#/emms, lists a number of projects under
"needed by". But there is no differentiation between Emms, a GNU
project, and those "needed by" projects.

I agree that it is their right to distribute Emms as they wish as long
as they abide by the terms of the license, but I do not agree that their
particular form of distribution is good for Emms (no quality control for
those "needed by" projects; do they even work?) or if it is good for the
people who enjoy Emms (maybe they steer people to use proprietary
services.)

People just learn to understand that different packages usually means different authors, and having the prefix emms- on many packages has little bearing on your reputation.

The word "gnu" doesn't even appear on the website for Emms on
MELPA. Surely there is some value to pointing out to people which part
of what is being distributed is a GNU project, and thereby subject to
GNU's standards. People can then go on to ignore the information, but at
least they have access to it.

That is because the main package file doesn't follow the ELPA standard of having it commentary describe the whole package.

See the "Description" on the MELPA site. The area can host a more thorough description if you make it so.

     * Not even linking to the Emms home page
       (https://www.gnu.org/software/emms/).

I think it does: I see this when I open the package in M-x list-packages:

    Homepage: https://www.gnu.org/software/emms/

The MELPA website links to the git repository instead.

Yes, that was what I was referring to.

And that is because, I'm guessing, your main package file doesn't have the "Homepage" header.

The current guidelines say the following:

Contact package author
     If you are not the original author or maintainer of the package
     you are submitting, please notify the authors prior to submitting
     and include them in the pull request process.

… so things have indeed improved a lot since 2012.

Not in the case of Emms, since nobody has done so. Therefore, Emms has
not been the beneficiary of such an improvement.

The above are guidelines for when a package recipe is submitted. Once it's submitted, the package simply continues to be distributed. Unless someone raises an issue, proposes a better recipe, etc.

     * Find a way of packaging a project as-is. For instance, Emms could
       be distributed as is, and the M/ELPA software could simply point
       at where Emms keeps its .el files for Emacs to find. This is
       instead of how I see ELPA working now, which is to force the
       software through a kind of a sieve (I think ELPA calls it a
       recipe) where only a select few files come out the other end.

It's trivial to make a recipe that includes all files, so I wouldn't
worry about this.

The Emms distribution already contains all of the files by defintion;
none needed to be remove to begin with. I feel like we looking at the
issue from two different viewpoints.

Yes: MELPA uses "recipes" (files with data in particular format) to automate distribution.

       Emms doesn't need a recipe; it already comes organized and
       packaged for working with Emacs.

I think most users these days expect "packaged" to mean "installable
using package.el", while EMMS only provides source releases; that's
why you see the MELPA recipe slicing and dicing the emms repo.

I don't agree with "most people"-type statements as an argument for a
number of reasons, among them that I've always been against speaking on
behalf of other people. I can speak for myself as the maintainer of Emms
on behalf of GNU, and try to steer toward to the goal of the GNU project
when doing so. I don't check to see if there is a majority or minority
supporting me in this regard.

Surely you care about the users' convenience at least a little?

It will be great to have an improved EMMS recipe in MELPA!  If you run
into trouble, you should ask on the bug tracker; the MELPA folks are
great.

Why does Emms need to be offered through three different channels at the
same time?

I don't know, really. You could keep the most popular one.

Do you have any download stats for the last year? Or since 2012?

Ideally, I would contact the MELPA bug tracker and have Emms removed
from MELPA, since it can be trivially downloaded from a GNU server, and
will hopefully soon be installable via ELPA.

I'm fairly sure that if you demand to be removed, they will do so.

Doing that would punish existing users, however. So I can hardly understand the reasons for doing so.



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