There has been a lot of discussion in the past few months about RPM -- its present state, its future plans, and its leadership team. In particular, the Fedora Project has received numerous requests asking us, "what are you guys doing about RPM?"
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There has been a lot of discussion in the past few months about RPM -- its
present state, its future plans, and its leadership team. In particular,
the Fedora Project has received numerous requests asking us, "what are you
guys doing about RPM?"
Here is our answer, in a few words. Then if you want more, you can read
the rest of this note:
The Fedora Project is leading the creation of a new community around RPM.
One in which the leaders can come from Fedora, from Red Hat, from Novell,
from Mandriva, or from anywhere. Job #1 is to take the current RPM
codebase and clean it up, and in doing so work with all the other people
and groups who rely on RPM to build a first-rate upstream project.
==========
The Fedora Board has spoken with Fedora stakeholders both inside and
outside Red Hat, developers/maintainers in Novell, and other parties who
rely on RPM as the foundation for their distributions. We wanted to make
sure those parties agreed that this was the right thing to do for their
respective communities. We touched base with some of these people at the
recent LSB conference, and the overwhelming community opinion there was in
favor of what we are outlining here.
At the most fundamental level, we begin with two points:
(1) RPM is an important piece of technology, not just for Fedora or for
Red Hat, but for many other distributions and users. Its stability and
maintenance are critical.
(2) Red Hat realizes the need to build a strong community of contributors
around RPM, that the upstream of RPM needs to be handled in a manner which
allows contributors and developers to have maximum freedom in their
modifications, and that those modifications can be easily shared across
distributions.
Expanding on that:
(3) RPM, as a file format, is good at what it does and capable of being
the core of a Linux distribution. From the Fedora perspective, we are not
particularly interested in making any grand deviations from it at this
time.
(4) RPM, as an application, has a fairly mature feature set that we are
very interested in stabilizing and bug fixing. Furthermore, we want to
make sure that RPM is a stable and simplified base for the building of
other technologies on top of it. Down the road, we might be interested in
exploring a variety of new features, but we don't believe that should be
the initial focus of our efforts.
Ultimately, the Fedora Project and Red Hat are committed to seeing RPM be
as healthy and vibrant as many other large open source projects -- GNOME,
Xorg, etc -- consumed and contributed to by many companies, users,
distributions, and developers. Our overall goal for RPM is to ensure that
is has consistency, reliability, and stability.
We switch now to a handy Q&A format:
Q -- So what, specifically, are you doing with RPM? And where is the work
going to happen?
We have set up a new repository, wiki, and webspace -- external to any
distribution or company -- for RPM, to which anyone can contribute. A
reboot of the upstream, if you will. We don't expect that everyone will
be running the same version of RPM, or run with the same patches, but we'd
like for there to be a single place that everyone can refer to as
upstream, and be able to contribute patches.
There is already a contributor base that exists around RPM -- engineers
within Red Hat, Novell, Mandriva, and other organizations. We don't want
to leave those people behind -- we want to do a better job of
collaborating and accepting their work.
Everything will live at rpm.org, with a relaunched wiki, code repository,
and mailing lists. As for rpm.org itself, its hosting and maintainership
is outside of Red Hat, and is being generously provided by Duke
University.
Q -- How is that different from what currently exists?
What we're doing here is collecting together everyone who has a stake in
the future of RPM and building a healthy community around it. This
involves major bug fixing, development work, performance work and making
regular, predictable releases. As it stands today, we don't have these
things. This is a good first step. Could you call it a fork? Maybe. But
we're doing it because we think it's the right thing to do, for
distributions all the way down to the individual users of RPM.
Q -- Where is all this stuff going to happen? What's the public mailing
list and wiki? What *EXACTLY* is Fedora or Red Hat going to do?
Short answer -- http://rpm.org
Over the past few years, engineers from Red Hat and other companies, as
well as a community of independent contributors, have been working on and
maintaining their own versions of RPM -- sometimes sharing patches,
sometimes not. It is important that these contributions move through an
upstream process like many other projects do, in order to maintain a
healthy community and proper checks and balances.
To that end, Red Hat is adding an additional engineer that works full time
on upstream issues including patch reviews, community development, etc.
Additionally other Red Hat engineers will contribute to RPM like any other
open source project -- working on the release-engineering parts of RPM
such as rpmbuild, and doing maintenance work.
Additionally, here are some of our initial goals:
* Give RPM a full technical review, based off of RPM 4.4.2. This is the
common base for Novell and Red Hat. Look what vendors have on top of
4.4.2 and work towards a shared base. Figure out which pieces or code
paths are unnecessary, poorly implemented, or receive little to no use,
and either clean them up or clear them out. Make RPM simpler.
There's a lot of folks out there who are using RPM, including the various
Red Hat/Fedora based distros, Suse, and Mandriva, just to name a few.
Simplificaion and focus on the parts of RPM that are core to these
stakeholders is a good way to start.
* In turn, this gives us a chance to do a better job with bug fixes.
Squashing bugs that already exist, or closing out bugs that are related to
parts of RPM that are superfluous.
* Give RPM the stability that it needs to continue to be the cornerstone
of many distributions.
* Enhance the rpm-python bindings, which includes understanding and
gathering together the work that already exists in this area.
Most importantly, this work will be done in the community, fully
transparent with the help of the community and RPM stakeholders outside of
Red Hat or Fedora. This is all about incremental steps, not blowing
everything away and starting from scratch.
Q -- When is all of this happening?
Starting now. Planning and review happening over the next 3-6 months, at
rpm.org. Implementation happening appropriately alongside that planning,
as in most any free software project. Initially, Paul Nasrat is the
primary developer/maintainer dedicated to RPM from Red Hat. At the same
time, we want to make sure that leadership has a chance to develop and
emerge, rather than be mandated.
Q -- How did we end up here?
This is the part of the email in which Red Hat takes some accountability
for the current situation:
* Several years ago, the maintainer of RPM worked for Red Hat. When he
left, he continued his own work on RPM, which he acknowledges is a fork.
And that's fine -- we support anyone's right to fork, since forking is one
of the paths to innovation in open source software.
* Red Hat didn't commit the necessary resources to RPM following that
departure.
* RPM, without a strong upstream, has languished as a result.
* The community has (rightfully) been demanding that the situation be
fixed, and this is the first step in that effort.
- --
Max Spevack
+ http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/MaxSpevack
+ gpg key -- http://spevack.org/max.asc
+ fingerprint -- CD52 5E72 369B B00D 9E9A 773E 2FDB CB46 5A17 CF21
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