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JessicaS11 avatar JessicaS11 commented on August 18, 2024 1

I just wanted to leave an update here for posterity: I just reduced the required reviews for merging into master (now main) from development from two reviews to one review, with maintainer status required to merge. I'm hoping this will reduce the review burden somewhat, while continuing to allow project teams the ability to work on development, review their sub-teams' PRs, and not have fear that they will "break something" because they are merging to main.

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weiji14 avatar weiji14 commented on August 18, 2024 1

I just wanted to leave an update here for posterity: I just reduced the required reviews for merging into master (now main) from development from two reviews to one review, with maintainer status required to merge. I'm hoping this will reduce the review burden somewhat, while continuing to allow project teams the ability to work on development, review their sub-teams' PRs, and not have fear that they will "break something" because they are merging to main.

Sounds good, and thanks again for the Zoom conversation clarifying the need for a separate development branch, I think it's good to make people feel confident that they can try things out without breaking stuff!

P.S. I did a quick PR to rename master to main across the docs at #194

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JessicaS11 avatar JessicaS11 commented on August 18, 2024

Hello @weiji14. The development team/ICESat-2 project group during the Hackweek decided to transition to a development and master/main branch model in order to separate out the multiple directions of rapid development from the broader release schedule while maintaining a stable version on master. I'll note that at the time there was a not yet a pip install option, so other than tags there was no way to differentiate between stable releases and ongoing development. The separation also allowed us to expand the organization to include frequent project contributors and allow joint development on a shared branch while protecting the master branch.

I appreciate your concern for burdening maintainers, and I agree that there are likely some ways to simplify the process that don't require massive re-reviews by a few developers. Perhaps we could start a conversation on Discourse about this aspect (since it's not technically a code issue, but more of a discussion item) to brainstorm some alternative approaches?

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