I understand that. Perhaps things will improve when RC1 is released.
Kobus
greg.knaddison@gmail.com 2/27/2006 7:15:52 PM >>>
On 2/27/06, Kobus Myburgh ITBJDM@puknet.puk.ac.za wrote:
Perhaps the old unmaintained modules should be removed, perhaps?
Determining the list of unmaintained modules is somewhat difficult.
On top of that, a module that has working 4.5 and/or 4.6 versions is not "unmaintained" it's just maintained for a previous version of Drupal.
Greg -- [ Drupal support list | http://lists.drupal.org/ ]
On 2/27/06, Kobus Myburgh ITBJDM@puknet.puk.ac.za wrote:
I understand that. Perhaps things will improve when RC1 is released.
As you are probably aware, "things will improve" when people contribute patches that upgrade modules.
There is a handbook section on the subject and a script to help the process. It apparently takes a couple of hours per module.
Regards, Greg
Greg Knaddison wrote:
On 2/27/06, Kobus Myburgh ITBJDM@puknet.puk.ac.za wrote:
I understand that. Perhaps things will improve when RC1 is released.
As you are probably aware, "things will improve" when people contribute patches that upgrade modules.
There is a handbook section on the subject and a script to help the process. It apparently takes a couple of hours per module.
It depends very strongly on the module and how many forms it has and how intricate they are. The amount of time required seems to go up exponentially with the complexity of the forms.
On Monday 27 February 2006 09:46 am, Greg Knaddison wrote:
On 2/27/06, Kobus Myburgh ITBJDM@puknet.puk.ac.za wrote:
I understand that. Perhaps things will improve when RC1 is released.
As you are probably aware, "things will improve" when people contribute patches that upgrade modules.
There is a handbook section on the subject and a script to help the process. It apparently takes a couple of hours per module.
Regards, Greg
The last number I heard was 8, but it was not mentioned as to what that is based on (nor than the 2 hrs number, IIRC). I assume it is based on the personal experience of the people making the statements.