Hi David,
Two things should happen at this point:
1. Ownership of the repo should be transferred to the Eclipse Webmaster
account (eclipsewebmaster on GitHub). This will allow us to move the
repo to the LocationTech organization
2. Since IP review is done on a specific point in time, the entire
history up to that point must be stashed away in a separate namespace.
Since this operation essentially rewrites the entire history of your
repo, it will invalidate all the forks and clones that may exist. Now
would be a good time to communicate this to your community.
Details about GitHub and LocationTech can be found here:
https://wiki.eclipse.org/Social_Coding/Hosting_a_Project_at_GitHub
The actual process we use for stashing history is described here:
https://wiki.eclipse.org/GitHub
Please let me know when you're ready to move forward on this.
Denis
On 16/06/15 09:03 AM, Andrew Ross wrote:
> Hey David,
>
> Great news!
>
> That's right. Let me loop in Denis. He can point to the wiki page
> where the instructions are & help with this. It should be pretty
> painless. Thanks in advance Denis.
>
> (cc Wayne to keep him in the loop)
>
> Shout if you guys need anything from me to help with this.
>
> Kind regards,
>
> Andrew
>
> On 16/06/15 00:16,
david.w.smiley@xxxxxxxxx wrote:
>> Hi Andrew,
>>
>> Good news is that Sharon & her team completed the “preliminary
>> review” of Spatial4j:
>>
https://dev.eclipse.org/ipzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=8417#c36
>> She says that I can now “check the code related to this contribution
>> into the repository that was assigned to your project”. Given that
>> this is a GitHub based project that will stay in GitHub, does this
>> simply mean Spatial4j will transfer over to within the LocationTech
>> org in GitHub? If so; how do I do that?
>>
>> ~ David
>
>