82 lines
3.0 KiB
Plaintext
82 lines
3.0 KiB
Plaintext
Things I want
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=============
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Environment variables
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-------------
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Do something to make it easier to debug environment variables, because that is
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often confusing.
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https://github.com/creationix/nvm/issues/719
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https://github.com/creationix/nvm/issues/589
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Documenting that people should run "env" when their tests fail might be good
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enough.
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Licensing and copyright
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------------------------
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* Reference all owners and years in the Copyright file
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* Consider copyleft licenses
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* Add license notices to other files if necessary
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Packaging
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------------
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Package for package managers.
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* I want NixOS, of course.
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* Debian is probably the big one.
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Other interesting package managers
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* Update the npm package
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* Homebrew (for Mac)
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Windows
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----------
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Try running Urchin in Windows somehow. Interpreters include
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* CygWin (https://www.cygwin.com/)
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* MSYS (http://mingw.org/wiki/msys)
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* GNU on Windows (https://github.com/bmatzelle/gow/wiki)
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* Git for Windows (https://git-scm.com/download/win)
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* win-bash (http://win-bash.sourceforge.net/)
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Consider copyleft licenses
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----------
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ScraperWiki owns the original version of Urchin (Thomas Levine did the early
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work as part of his work for ScraperWiki.) and originally licensed it under an
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MIT-style license. Other people made changes after this original ScraperWiki
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version. As of January 2016, they are just Thomas Levine (when he wasn't
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working for ScraperWiki) and Michael Klement.
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The original license was MIT just because that's what ScraperWiki put on
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everything. Should we change the license?
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The MIT-style license grants pretty much all rights. It says that you need
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to attribute when you redistribute source code, but you don't
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necessarily have to redistribute source code.
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A copyleft license adds the restriction that modified versions of the
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code need to be licensed under the same license. GNU licenses in
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particular require that source code be released if non-source versions are
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released, and the different GNU licenses differ in what how the
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non-source version is defined. (The original, GPL, discusses compiled
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binaries.) Copyleft doesn't mean anything specific for commercial use.
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MIT-licensed code can be modified and then licensed as GPL, because MIT
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license allows that, but GPL code can't be modified as MIT, because MIT
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doesn't allow that. And if we get all of the authors to agree on it, we
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can always add whatever crazy license we want, regardless of what we
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have already.
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The distinction between MIT-style and GNU-something might matter quite little
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in the case of Urchin.
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1. Urchin is written in an interpreted language (shell), so it might be
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hard to distribute usefully without providing the source code.
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2. Urchin just runs tests; it doesn't get compiled with the rest of the
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code (also because it's in shell). Thus, I think a GPL license on
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Urchin wouldn't infect the code being tested.
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This is as far as I have gotten with contemplating license changes. For now
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we're sticking with the original MIT-style license, but it's easy to change
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licenses later.
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