Message ID | 20231123091424.25640-1-anton@khirnov.net |
---|---|
State | Accepted |
Commit | 56a8b34b64e47dde75314f1b648f3a6f7a325437 |
Headers | show |
Series | [FFmpeg-devel,1/2] tools/general_assembly: implement extra GA members | expand |
Context | Check | Description |
---|---|---|
yinshiyou/make_loongarch64 | success | Make finished |
yinshiyou/make_fate_loongarch64 | success | Make fate finished |
andriy/make_x86 | success | Make finished |
andriy/make_fate_x86 | success | Make fate finished |
Set pushed. The general_assembly.pl script should now be usable as the authoritative source for GA members.
On 2023-11-26 10:18 +0100, Anton Khirnov wrote: > Set pushed. > > The general_assembly.pl script should now be usable as the authoritative > source for GA members. The patches mostly LGTM. My Perl knowledge in general is really mostly from 20 years ago. So if there is any Perl-ish devil in the details I surely have overlooked it. Please pardon me if I missed any details on how the program works. The edge cases are always the tricky stuff... One thing about this patch and that program in general is a bit unfortunate: The use of PerlDate is_between. Here is the doc I found for it: $dt->is_between( $lower, $upper ) Checks whether $dt is strictly between two other DateTime objects. "Strictly" means that $dt must be greater than $lower and less than $upper. If it is equal to either object then this method returns false. AFAIU it affects the script in 2 places: 1. In subroutine get_date_range: Here the exact day matching date_ga_rule is treated like anything >= date_first_regular 2. In the loop adding the extra member. The member would not be added on both, the day they were elected nor the day 2 years after. Case 1 should be "strictly academical" and thus not really important because to my knowledge no vote was started on that day. For case 2 it will be not important on most days, but it would seem more common and intuitive to use either the closed interval or a half open interval. Where including the first and the last day or including the first and excluding the day seem most natural to me. Best regards, Alexander P.S. As date calculations always turn out nightmares if you look at them long enough, it would possible be a good idea to always use UTC and review how time zones are handled in git CLI. P.P.S. For quick reference follow copies for both places referenced above: Case 1: sub get_date_range { my ($now) = @_; # date on which the GA update rule was established, and the voter list # was extraordinarily updated; cf.: # * http://lists.ffmpeg.org/pipermail/ffmpeg-devel/2023-October/316054.html # Message-Id <169818211998.11195.16532637803201641594@lain.khirnov.net> # * http://lists.ffmpeg.org/pipermail/ffmpeg-devel/2023-November/316618.html # Message-Id <5efcab06-8510-4226-bf18-68820c7c69ba@betaapp.fastmail.com> my $date_ga_rule = DateTime->new(year => 2023, month => 11, day => 06); # date when the regular update rule is first applied my $date_first_regular = DateTime->new(year => 2024); if ($now->is_between($date_ga_rule, $date_first_regular)) { return ($date_ga_rule->clone()->set_year($date_ga_rule->year - 3), $date_ga_rule); } if ($now < $date_ga_rule) { print STDERR "GA before $date_ga_rule is not well-defined, be very careful with the output\n"; } my $cur_year_jan = $now->clone()->truncate(to => "year"); my $cur_year_jul = $cur_year_jan->clone()->set_month(7); my $date_until = $now > $cur_year_jul ? $cur_year_jul : $cur_year_jan; my $date_since = $date_until->clone()->set_year($date_until->year - 3); return ($date_since, $date_until); } Case 2: foreach my $entry (@extra_members) { my $elected = $entry->[2]; if ($date->is_between($elected, $elected->clone()->set_year($elected->year + 2))) { $assembly{$entry->[0]} = $entry->[1]; } }
> On Nov 26, 2023, at 23:08, Alexander Strasser <eclipse7@gmx.net> wrote: > > On 2023-11-26 10:18 +0100, Anton Khirnov wrote: >> Set pushed. >> >> The general_assembly.pl script should now be usable as the authoritative >> source for GA members. > > The patches mostly LGTM. > > My Perl knowledge in general is really mostly from 20 years ago. > So if there is any Perl-ish devil in the details I surely have > overlooked it. > > Please pardon me if I missed any details on how the program works. > The edge cases are always the tricky stuff... > > One thing about this patch and that program in general is a bit > unfortunate: The use of PerlDate is_between. > > Here is the doc I found for it: > > $dt->is_between( $lower, $upper ) > Checks whether $dt is strictly between two other DateTime objects. > > "Strictly" means that $dt must be greater than $lower and less than $upper. If it is equal to either object then this method returns false. > > > AFAIU it affects the script in 2 places: > > 1. In subroutine get_date_range: > Here the exact day matching date_ga_rule is treated like > anything >= date_first_regular > > 2. In the loop adding the extra member. The member would not be added > on both, the day they were elected nor the day 2 years after. > > Case 1 should be "strictly academical" and thus not really important > because to my knowledge no vote was started on that day. > > For case 2 it will be not important on most days, but it would seem > more common and intuitive to use either the closed interval or a > half open interval. Where including the first and the last day or > including the first and excluding the day seem most natural to me. > > > Best regards, > Alexander > > > P.S. > As date calculations always turn out nightmares if you look at them > long enough, it would possible be a good idea to always use UTC and > review how time zones are handled in git CLI. > > P.P.S. > For quick reference follow copies for both places referenced above: > > Case 1: > sub get_date_range { > my ($now) = @_; > > # date on which the GA update rule was established, and the voter list > # was extraordinarily updated; cf.: > # * http://lists.ffmpeg.org/pipermail/ffmpeg-devel/2023-October/316054.html > # Message-Id <169818211998.11195.16532637803201641594@lain.khirnov.net> > # * http://lists.ffmpeg.org/pipermail/ffmpeg-devel/2023-November/316618.html > # Message-Id <5efcab06-8510-4226-bf18-68820c7c69ba@betaapp.fastmail.com> > my $date_ga_rule = DateTime->new(year => 2023, month => 11, day => 06); > # date when the regular update rule is first applied > my $date_first_regular = DateTime->new(year => 2024); > > if ($now->is_between($date_ga_rule, $date_first_regular)) { > return ($date_ga_rule->clone()->set_year($date_ga_rule->year - 3), $date_ga_rule); > } > > if ($now < $date_ga_rule) { > print STDERR "GA before $date_ga_rule is not well-defined, be very careful with the output\n"; > } > > my $cur_year_jan = $now->clone()->truncate(to => "year"); > my $cur_year_jul = $cur_year_jan->clone()->set_month(7); > my $date_until = $now > $cur_year_jul ? $cur_year_jul : $cur_year_jan; > my $date_since = $date_until->clone()->set_year($date_until->year - 3); > > return ($date_since, $date_until); > } > > > Case 2: > foreach my $entry (@extra_members) { > my $elected = $entry->[2]; > if ($date->is_between($elected, $elected->clone()->set_year($elected->year + 2))) { > $assembly{$entry->[0]} = $entry->[1]; > } > } I can only say wow as I know zero about perl. Is it the same reason to write it in perl as automake so it can be run everywhere? > _______________________________________________ > ffmpeg-devel mailing list > ffmpeg-devel@ffmpeg.org > https://ffmpeg.org/mailman/listinfo/ffmpeg-devel > > To unsubscribe, visit link above, or email > ffmpeg-devel-request@ffmpeg.org with subject "unsubscribe".
Quoting Alexander Strasser (2023-11-26 16:08:42) > On 2023-11-26 10:18 +0100, Anton Khirnov wrote: > > Set pushed. > > > > The general_assembly.pl script should now be usable as the authoritative > > source for GA members. > > The patches mostly LGTM. > > My Perl knowledge in general is really mostly from 20 years ago. > So if there is any Perl-ish devil in the details I surely have > overlooked it. > > Please pardon me if I missed any details on how the program works. > The edge cases are always the tricky stuff... > > One thing about this patch and that program in general is a bit > unfortunate: The use of PerlDate is_between. > > Here is the doc I found for it: > > $dt->is_between( $lower, $upper ) > Checks whether $dt is strictly between two other DateTime objects. > > "Strictly" means that $dt must be greater than $lower and less than $upper. If it is equal to either object then this method returns false. > > > AFAIU it affects the script in 2 places: > > 1. In subroutine get_date_range: > Here the exact day matching date_ga_rule is treated like > anything >= date_first_regular > > 2. In the loop adding the extra member. The member would not be added > on both, the day they were elected nor the day 2 years after. > > Case 1 should be "strictly academical" and thus not really important > because to my knowledge no vote was started on that day. > > For case 2 it will be not important on most days, but it would seem > more common and intuitive to use either the closed interval or a > half open interval. Where including the first and the last day or > including the first and excluding the day seem most natural to me. These objects are not days, they are specific times with nanosecond resolution. Since I'm not specifying time in the constructor, it defaults to the first nanosecond-long instant of the day, so none of these problems really apply.
On Thu, Nov 23, 2023 at 10:14:23AM +0100, Anton Khirnov wrote: > --- > tools/general_assembly.pl | 20 +++++++++++++++++--- > 1 file changed, 17 insertions(+), 3 deletions(-) > > diff --git a/tools/general_assembly.pl b/tools/general_assembly.pl > index 4c3208ccac..3bf65f3405 100755 > --- a/tools/general_assembly.pl > +++ b/tools/general_assembly.pl > @@ -13,6 +13,12 @@ use utf8; > use DateTime; > use DateTime::Format::ISO8601; > > +my @extra_members = ( > + # entries should be of the format > + # [ <name>, <email>, <date elected> ], > + # ['Foo Bar', 'foo@bar', DateTime->new(year => 8613, month => 5, day => 22)], > +); > + > sub trim { my $s = shift; $s =~ s/^\s+|\s+$//g; return $s }; > > sub print_help { > @@ -29,7 +35,7 @@ sub print_help { > my $print_full = 1; > my $print_names = 0; > my $print_emails = 0; > -my $date = DateTime->now()->iso8601; > +my $date_str = DateTime->now()->iso8601; > my $help = 0; > > GetOptions( > @@ -37,7 +43,7 @@ GetOptions( > "names" => \$print_names, > "emails" => \$print_emails, > "help" => \$help, > - "date=s" => \$date, > + "date=s" => \$date_str, > "h" => \$help, > ); > > @@ -76,7 +82,8 @@ sub get_date_range { > return ($date_since, $date_until); > } > > -my ($since, $until) = get_date_range(DateTime::Format::ISO8601->parse_datetime($date)); > +my $date = DateTime::Format::ISO8601->parse_datetime($date_str); > +my ($since, $until) = get_date_range($date); > > my @shortlog = split /\n/, decode('UTF-8', > `git log --pretty=format:"%aN <%aE>" --since="$since" --until="$until" | sort | uniq -c | sort -r`, > @@ -108,6 +115,13 @@ foreach my $line (@shortlog) { > $assembly{$name} = $email; > } > > +foreach my $entry (@extra_members) { > + my $elected = $entry->[2]; > + if ($date->is_between($elected, $elected->clone()->set_year($elected->year + 2))) { tools/general_assembly.pl Can't locate object method "is_between" via package "DateTime" at tools/general_assembly.pl line 75. is_between seems to have been added in 1.52 2020-02-29 So this is unavailable in several distros, it works with cpan though but this shoould be docuemnted if it cannot be avoided thx [...]
diff --git a/tools/general_assembly.pl b/tools/general_assembly.pl index 4c3208ccac..3bf65f3405 100755 --- a/tools/general_assembly.pl +++ b/tools/general_assembly.pl @@ -13,6 +13,12 @@ use utf8; use DateTime; use DateTime::Format::ISO8601; +my @extra_members = ( + # entries should be of the format + # [ <name>, <email>, <date elected> ], + # ['Foo Bar', 'foo@bar', DateTime->new(year => 8613, month => 5, day => 22)], +); + sub trim { my $s = shift; $s =~ s/^\s+|\s+$//g; return $s }; sub print_help { @@ -29,7 +35,7 @@ sub print_help { my $print_full = 1; my $print_names = 0; my $print_emails = 0; -my $date = DateTime->now()->iso8601; +my $date_str = DateTime->now()->iso8601; my $help = 0; GetOptions( @@ -37,7 +43,7 @@ GetOptions( "names" => \$print_names, "emails" => \$print_emails, "help" => \$help, - "date=s" => \$date, + "date=s" => \$date_str, "h" => \$help, ); @@ -76,7 +82,8 @@ sub get_date_range { return ($date_since, $date_until); } -my ($since, $until) = get_date_range(DateTime::Format::ISO8601->parse_datetime($date)); +my $date = DateTime::Format::ISO8601->parse_datetime($date_str); +my ($since, $until) = get_date_range($date); my @shortlog = split /\n/, decode('UTF-8', `git log --pretty=format:"%aN <%aE>" --since="$since" --until="$until" | sort | uniq -c | sort -r`, @@ -108,6 +115,13 @@ foreach my $line (@shortlog) { $assembly{$name} = $email; } +foreach my $entry (@extra_members) { + my $elected = $entry->[2]; + if ($date->is_between($elected, $elected->clone()->set_year($elected->year + 2))) { + $assembly{$entry->[0]} = $entry->[1]; + } +} + # generate the output string my @out_lines; foreach my $name (sort keys %assembly) {