Re: Problems commiting damned-lies package



Hi Emmanuele,

Just a quick question: which is the difference between commiting directly into Git and commiting through DL? PO file checks are the same (or should be), so commiting directly is not more dangerous than using DL. the same checks DL makes into a PO file are done in my script, for example. If a PO file breaks your module's building it doesn't matter if I committed it directly into git or usind DL.

Also, note that not all translators will have commit rights: only a reduced group of them. Breaking things in git is possible for both translators and developers: that's one of the reasons we use Git, to be able to revert commits and even revoke commit access to a person who breaks things several times.

Of course, having a tool or a feature in DL to upload a bunch of PO files and commit them directly would be the best option, but we currently don no have it. 

This is not a question of being 20 years o 20 days in the project: this is a question of helping us with our work, because that work is as valid as yours, and we all are responsible with it. pre-commit hooks can be implemented (they are already, but we could study if are enough or not) to avoid breaking things, but its really discouraging to follow DL's workflow to commit a 1-modified string in a PO file. Multiply it by 20...

We don't want special snowflakes, we just want to be able to do our work in the best way.

Regards

El lun., 22 jun. 2020 a las 12:30, Emmanuele Bassi (<ebassi gmail com>) escribió:
Hi;

to be brutally honest, as a maintainer I don't want any translator to commit directly to Git—unless it's done to a separate branch and/or through merge requests.

Translators do not build the projects they translate, and they don't (or cannot) know when they break things. The only way maintainers know that a broken translation happened is that suddenly the CI mails us, and then we have to hunt down what happened behind out backs. This is even worse when you realise something has broken a long time ago because the release process is now impossible.

I'd rather have an automated, web UI tool that pushed changes to a branch and opened a merge request that ran the CI pipeline (and maybe the dist process), than allowing translators to commit to Git directly. I don't really care if some translator is an old hand that was around when GNOME used CVS and scripted their way to push to dozens of repositories at once; we started using a lot of tooling to ensure things don't break, and even developers have started pushing things to development branches instead of committing directly to master. I don't see why translators have to be the special snowflakes of the whole GNOME project, and break stuff for everyone else just because of their 20 years old workflow.

Ciao,
 Emmanuele.

On Mon, 22 Jun 2020 at 11:03, Daniel Mustieles García via gnome-i18n <gnome-i18n gnome org> wrote:
Some time ago I talked about this with +Carlos Soriano . I asked him about the possibility of creating a user's group in Gitlab, formed by some team coordinators, which will have commit rights to be able to commit a bunch of translations due to the heavy clickwork must be done in DL. Still waiting...

Me (and some other team coordinators) got Git access before migration to Gitlab, and it was not a problem. Having such rights will help us a lot to be more agile maintaining and commiting translations. Yes, I currently have those rights and can use an automated script [1] to ease my life, but I don't have commit rights in some new modules (app-icon-preview, shortwave...). I'd like to formerly request this feature/rigths. If we found any problem with a wrong commit or something like that is quick and easy to revert that commit; if a user with rights uses them for other things that translations is quick and easy to revoke those privileges. Advantages for us to maintain and keep translations up-to-date are huge.

Please consider this request and let's work together to make it possible in the best way.

Best regards.


El dom., 21 jun. 2020 a las 20:43, Matej Urban via gnome-i18n (<gnome-i18n gnome org>) escribió:
Hello,
some time ago I complained about inability to commit damned-lies package due to wrong access rights. Ok, I can live with that, but lately I get this error on many, many packages, especially new ones, like:

app-icon-preview, authenticator, fractal, fragments, gnome-keysign, obfuscate, shortwave ... list goes on

Is there any special reason why not even coordinators are able to do that the usual way? Yes, I know, there is another way to do it, but it is cumbersome and takes a lot, lot, lot time to do it and what is more important, each project has some specifics. For this reasons I do not push these ...

Please advise or better, please bend at least for coordinators these rules.

Thank you,
Matej


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