yep - good that someone else agrees - it was easy to implement things that
way actually - and it gives heaps of flexibility.
On 2/3/07, Felipe Piccolini <felipe.piccolini(a)bluesoft.cl> wrote:
I was thinking the same about packages... as I see it (IMHO). You are
right about not versioning packages, but just rules.versioning rules and
label em with draft, revised, prod, etc. is enought to author that.
Packaging is a total diferent process
in the workflow of versioning rules to put on production, so when a user
edited, and finished (revised to prod state) a rule
or a group of rules (marked in categories as u implemented) then organize
those rules in a package is a step to prepare
a rulebase in a context to use in production, so when a user package rules
he is thinking in use them as a group oriented
exclusively to use in a context (I think I already wrote this... lol) and
the state of rules should be "prod" picked from the repo,
so build this "package" and take a snapshot to keep in a diferent-context
repo is enought and is the way to do it (IMHO). So
the user can check that package, get history of deployments and then link
the package to the rules stored on the repo of rules.
If he wants to make a change starting from the package "saved" he can get
the package snapshot and edit it including new
version of rules or something like that.... or add/remove rules, etc. If
he wanna do another one he must pick up rules from
repository (organized in a context-categorized way) and rapidly make
another package which can o cant be as the one stored before.
I hope you can see that I agreed with the c) point :)
On 02-02-2007, at 3:04, Michael Neale wrote:
Hi All.
Been working on package versioning etc, and it was really confusing me and
doing my head in.
Basically, it is possible to version the package as a whole (basically
"baseline") it - but this is really confusing from a users point of view.
each asset (rule) is also individually versioned - so this extra layer is
confusing (I can't quite work it out myself - NOT a good sign).
So - what I propose is the following:
a) the ability to "status change" all the assets in a package in one hit
b) changes to package "meta data" such as description are not versioned
per-se
c) for deployment, you "copy" (ie take a snapshot of) a package to a
deployment "area":
eg say we have a package foo.bar
we then take foo.bar, set the status to "PROD" and then copy it to
/deployments/foo.bar/DeploymentLabel eg Date...
so when we look at deployments, we see a list of packages, and under
them a list of deployment/snapshots (which mean whatever you want them to).
Simple - not unlike how SVN branches work. Of course, this deployment
copying is completely optional. Many people will simply be happy with
package level statuses, and individual versioning.
Versioning of the "parent" package is quite confusing (eg looking through
the history of package versions - it isn't easy of obvious to see what they
are for or restore them anyway - AND it has no parallel with SVN or other
file based version that I am aware of - perhaps in the future I will
resurrect it one day??).
Please share your thoughts, this is the parth I am going down for now. Its
taken me too long to get to this point ;)
Damn this is a lot of work, but it has to be, as we don't want the end
users to be sweating this stuff, it has to Just Work !
Michael.
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