Dear Open Hub Users,
We’re excited to announce that we will be moving the Open Hub Forum to
https://community.synopsys.com/s/black-duck-open-hub.
Beginning immediately, users can head over,
register,
get technical help and discuss issue pertinent to the Open Hub. Registered users can also subscribe to Open Hub announcements here.
On May 1, 2020, we will be freezing https://www.openhub.net/forums and users will not be able to create new discussions. If you have any questions and concerns, please email us at
[email protected]
I noticed that IronPython project is not updating (https://www.ohloh.net/p/ironpython/enlistments).
I recently added the 2.7 maintenance branch, which has lots of recent activity compared to main, which is focused on 3.0.
However, ohloh is not picking up any new changes.
The project migrated over from codeplex to github some time ago. I believe the codeplex enlistment was left in because it contains the commits from when the project started in 2006 until the github repo was spun up in 2008. The migration from codeplex to github completed in April 10 of 2011.
Best Regards, Zack
Ah, I just read the reply to the previous topic (https://www.ohloh.net/forums/10/topics/6972) and am wondering if this issue is a symptom of a general site-wide thing, or is genuinely an issue with IronPython's enlistments.
Zack,
I am having some problem getting the project running. It looks as if, in changeset 76381 (Aug 24 2010) Add missing ipy 2.6 dir
. they checked in a complete .svn directory with all contents. I don't think that is kosher and I think ohloh is throwing up on that.
Also, the IronPython github repository is showing: This repository is no longer in use. The current source code for IronPython can be found at [https://github.com/IronLanguages/main.
](https://github.com/IronLanguages/main.")
I will need to contact the project manager via e-mail and CC you regarding the problems.
Thanks!
P.S. The nasty bug
in the other topic is limited to a few projects and though it is nasty
it is not widespread. Tnx!
Zack,
It also occurs to me that Codeplex's subversion repository is actually a hack which displays a Microsoft proprietary SCM (Team Foundation Server) as if it was subversion. That would explain the funny business which allowed a checkin of a .svn directory. Real subversion would never allow that.
Haven't heard anything yet from project management.
Thanks!