I've skimmed Release Management RFP/2014/Mark y Markus LLC just now and I'm having a lot of difficulty understanding why it's appropriate to spend tens of thousands of dollars to make two tarballs. tar is a free Unix program. Announcing the availability of a new tarball via e-mail and IRC is essentially free. MediaWiki is free software. What on earth is all of this money going toward, exactly?
Topic on Talk:Release Management RFP
Short answer: if the Foundation just wants a team to manage two tarballs, then the only amount that we're asking for is is the amount by "Total technical".
However, with that amount we won't be able to a lot of community building or engaging with larger users. That is something that the Foundation has said that they would like to see -- "the MediaWiki community would benefit from a more diverse set of benefactors for MediaWiki maintenance".
If that is the case, then they really need to help with some seed money for the process. We don't expect this to be ongoing, though, since we expect to get the funding from the user group in the future.
According to Release Management RFP/2014/Mark y Markus LLC, total technical is budgeted at $62,400 per year. That's a lot of money. If, for example, there are two tarballs released a year, what is six hours being spent on per week for release?
I'm not sure what "advocate third-party interests" means, but it will allegedly cost over $12,000. Why?
Same with "new formats of distribution" at over $18,000. You can buy a car for $18,000, but then you'll have a car (a physical, usable good that provides a direct benefit to the driver). What specifically are we getting for the $18,000 here?
I continue to be baffled by the costs here.
I tend to agree with MZ here. This seems like a lot of money to essentially put together a tarball
A quick clarification: There were roughly 20+ minor release tarballs (monthly, three supported MW branches each), several RCs and two major releases. They were produced following a unified process for security and maintenance, which had to be established. The tarballs were also tested automatically and manually, and the test automation had to be written. So it's not just about two tarballs a year.
Will answer your other questions seperately (later).
To be clear, I like and respect both Marks and all five of the Consortium group. You all are great and I love the work that you all do.
But I'm trying to figure out why MediaWiki releases are seemingly so expensive. If the cost were something like $5,000/year, I wouldn't think twice about the expense. But $130,000/year? I would hope we would have some magical automated release system with lots of bells and whistles if we're spending over $100,000 per year. You could hire two full-time developers who could focus exclusively on development work to make the MediaWiki installer and upgrader better for that kind of money.
Building a user group (a community) doesn't require money, exactly. It ideally should happen organically. Yes, you can invest time (and consequently money) into this type of work, but I'm not sure it's a great idea. It also seems pretty orthogonal to MediaWiki release management. As it is, I'm not quite sure what purpose a user group would serve, but a good part of me also feels that this topic is outside the scope of this talk page.
and the test automation had to be written
Is it open source?
It appears so. I think gerrit:89158 is what is being discussed. Though, it looks like hashar re-wrote a bunch of it, so I'm not sure how much Mark and Markus actually did.
What do we mean by “advocate third party interests”?
Here are some recent examples of what “advocate third party interests” means: the recent upload problem in 1.23 (about 2 hours) or the #REDIRECT bug (about 5 hours).
Of course, being available to engage in these unexpected problems takes time, too.
Another example is the one Cindy Cicalese mentioned in her endorsement. She submitted a minor patch to gerrit to add a needed hook to core and wasn't able to find anyone to review it. Because I was at SMWCon in Montreal and made it clear that I was available to help people get things done with MediaWiki, I was able to make sure her patch got the attention it needed.