Differences between revisions 19 and 20
Revision 19 as of 2007-07-04 17:09:58
Size: 5232
Editor: keturn
Comment: OpenID specs live at .net, not .org
Revision 20 as of 2007-07-07 12:07:25
Size: 5130
Editor: barry
Comment:
Deletions are marked like this. Additions are marked like this.
Line 1: Line 1:
#pragma page-filename DEV/versions/786596 #pragma page-filename DEV/versions/786630
Line 4: Line 4:
Mailman's source code is published in publically available revision control systems. You can use this to gain access to the very latest development trees. We are currently in the process of moving from [[http://subversion.tigris.org/|Subversion]] on [[http://sf.net|SourceForge]] to the [[http://www.bazaar-vcs.org|Bazaar]] distributed revision control system, with branches hosted on [[http://launchpad.net|Launchpad]]. Flag day is June 22, 2007, after which the Subversion repository will be made read-only (we'll keep it for posterity). Hosting the source code on Bazaar will provide both the core developers and unofficial third party extensions much more freedom to hack on Mailman. Mailman's source code is publish in a publicly available revision control system called [[http://www.bazaar-vcs.org|Bazaar]] available through the code hosting and open source development service called [[http://launchpad.net|Launchpad]]. On June 22, 2007, we switched from using Subversion on SourceForge to the new repository, and while the old Subversion repository will still be available read-only, no new updates will be committed to it. Hosting the source code on Bazaar provides both the core developers and unofficial third party extensions much more freedom to hack on Mailman.

Mailman Developer Resources

Source code revision control

Mailman's source code is publish in a publicly available revision control system called Bazaar available through the code hosting and open source development service called Launchpad. On June 22, 2007, we switched from using Subversion on SourceForge to the new repository, and while the old Subversion repository will still be available read-only, no new updates will be committed to it. Hosting the source code on Bazaar provides both the core developers and unofficial third party extensions much more freedom to hack on Mailman.

Here is more detail on how to develop Mailman code using Bazaar and Launchpad.

Here are a list of important official and unofficial branches.

Versions specific resources

Here are the collection of resources for people interested in the development of Mailman.

Initiatives and proposals

Other developer information

Google did a 2006 Summer of Codeprogram in 2006, and Mailman was a sponsor. See the Summer of Code page and Mailman 2.2 page for more information.

Mailman is a GNU project with the majority of the copyrights being held by the Free Software Foundation. We therefore request that developers who contribute code, assign their copyrights in their Mailman contribution to the FSF. To do this, you first need to submit a GNU copyright assignment request form containing some basic information, and then fill out the form that the FSF sends you. Please let us knowafter you've sent the second form so that we can track your contribution. The FSF often doesn't tell us in a timely manner when such forms have been received.

Relevant RFCs, references, and standards

Here are some useful references:

RFCs and drafts:


MailmanWiki: DEV/Home (last edited 2023-02-25 16:13:48 by stephen@xemacs.org)