[ocaml-infra] [Caml-list] Migration plan and bug hunt for ocaml.org - http://preview.ocaml.org
Kakadu
kakadu.hafanana at gmail.com
Wed Nov 6 13:31:32 GMT 2013
Amir,
Are all bugs related to redesign are marked with `redesign` tag? I
ask, because very small count of opened bugs are tagged with
`redesign`. Can I rely on tagged questions when I will check is my
bug reported or not?
Kind regards,
Kakadu
On Wed, Nov 6, 2013 at 2:31 PM, Amir Chaudhry <amc79 at cam.ac.uk> wrote:
> Dear caml-list,
>
> We're close to releasing the new design of ocaml.org but need help from the community to identify and fix bugs before we switch next week.
>
> Ashish, Christophe, Philippe and I have been discussing how we should go about this and below is the plan for migration. If you'd like to discuss any of this, then the infrastructure list is the best place to do so (cced).
>
> 1. We've made a new branch on the main ocaml.org repository [1] with the redesign. This branch is a fork of the main one and we've simply cleaned up and replayed our git commits there.
>
> 2. We've built a live version of the new site, which is visible at http://preview.ocaml.org - this is rebuilt every few minutes from the branch mentioned above.
>
> 3. Over the course of one week, we ask the community to review the new site and report any bugs or problems on the issue tracker [2]. We triage those bugs to identify any blockers and work on those first. This is the phase we'll be in from *today*.
>
> 4. After one week (7 days), and after blocking bugs have been fixed, we merge the site into the main branch. This would effectively present the new site to the world.
>
> During the above, we would not be able to accept any new pull requests on the old site but would be happy to accept them on the new branch. Hence, restricting the time frame to one week.
>
> Please note that the above is only intended to merge the *design* and *toolchain* for the new site. Specifically, we've created new landing pages, have new style sheets and have restructured the site's contents as well as made some new libraries [3, 4]. The new toolchain means people can write files in markdown, which makes contributing content a lot easier.
>
> Since the files are on GitHub, people don't even need to clone the site locally to make simple edits (or even add new pages). Just click the 'Edit this page' link in the footer to be taken to the right file in the repository and GitHub's editing and pull request features will allow you to make changes and submit updates, all from within your browser [5].
>
> There is still work to be done on adding new features but the above changes are already a great improvement to the site and are ready to be reviewed and merged.
>
> [1] https://github.com/ocaml/ocaml.org/tree/redesign
> [2] https://github.com/ocaml/ocaml.org/issues
> [3] http://pw374.github.io/posts/2013-09-05-22-31-26-about-omd.html
> [4] http://pw374.github.io/posts/2013-10-03-20-39-07-OPAMaging-MPP.html
> [5] https://help.github.com/articles/creating-and-editing-files-in-your-repository
>
> Best wishes,
> Amir
>
> --
> Caml-list mailing list. Subscription management and archives:
> https://sympa.inria.fr/sympa/arc/caml-list
> Beginner's list: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/ocaml_beginners
> Bug reports: http://caml.inria.fr/bin/caml-bugs
More information about the Infrastructure
mailing list