Dries Buytaert wrote:
No, that would be a crack dream. :)
What you need (and what you really want) is people that know your module inside out (!), that share your vision for the module (!), and that can help you maintain it (!). If your module is that important, it is your responsibility to build such team, to get people on board and to delegate responsibilities by making other people co-maintainers. If you want to be a responsible maintainer, it's part of the job description to find, motivate, guide and empower people to take on a role within your project and to make it sustain.
I think this is the crux of our difference in opinion, Dries. While it would be great and noble for me to build such a team out of desire to make my module successful and sustained, I might not do that for any number of reasons (e.g. lack of time, lack of diplomatic skills, lack of English language skills, people just think I'm ugly, whatever). The point then is that despite my "neglect" my module has become important and now there is nobody to maintain it. The "golden star" is the mark that points out to core and active developers contemplating a release that this is a module that needs special attention. Or so I understood the proposal from way back when. *My* proposal is that the issue get visibility and some sort of mechanism to help make sure temporarily-orphaned but critical modules don't get left behind. There are likely other methods than the golden repo idea. It just seemed that the door to any discussion was being closed. I think I've said enough on the subject. :-)