On Tue, Oct 1, 2013 at 1:50 PM, Dirk Thomas <
dthomas@osrfoundation.org>wrote:
> On 01.10.2013 11:44, Jack O'Quin wrote:
>
>>
>> On Tue, Oct 1, 2013 at 1:37 PM, Dirk Thomas <dthomas@osrfoundation.org<mailto:
>> dthomas@osrfoundation.**org <dthomas@osrfoundation.org>>> wrote:
>>
>> Tully has announced on ros-users that everybody should migrate
>> repositories away from kforge.ros.org <http://kforge.ros.org> /
>> code.ros.org <http://code.ros.org>
>> (http://lists.ros.org/__**pipermail/ros-users/2013-__**
>> September/067953.html<http://lists.ros.org/__pipermail/ros-users/2013-__September/067953.html><
>> http://lists.ros.org/**pipermail/ros-users/2013-**September/067953.html<http://lists.ros.org/pipermail/ros-users/2013-September/067953.html>
>> >).
>>
>> Simply because we have (nearly) no control over these servers anymore
>> and they might go away anytime.
>>
>>
>> Doesn't OSRF control the ros.org <http://ros.org> DNS names? Would OSU
>> host those repos?
>>
>
> Yes, OSRF does control ros.org by now.
> But we do not host any repository via ros.org.
> You should migrate them to available hosting platforms like GitHub,
> BitBucket, SourceForge, <fill in whatever you like>.
>
> If the repos have not yet been migrated I can only advise every
>> maintainer to grab their code and put it somewhere else or it might
>> suddenly disappear...
>>
>>
>> When it does, a lot of Electric and Fuerte users are going to be very
>> unhappy. And, the ROS wiki will be badly broken.
>>
>
> If you have any suggestions to avoid that please let us know.
How about making a read-only copy of those repositories on the OSU servers
and redirecting "
https://code.ros.org/svn" there? That way the information
will not be lost and the wiki will not get broken.
Anyone wanting to modify one of those packages to make a bug fix, for
example, would need to copy it somewhere else before making the change,
then re-release it from there. Some of them might even remember to update
rosdistro accordingly.
--
joq