1. 18 Jan, 2000 2 commits
  2. 17 Jan, 2000 3 commits
  3. 16 Jan, 2000 5 commits
  4. 15 Jan, 2000 5 commits
  5. 13 Jan, 2000 1 commit
  6. 12 Jan, 2000 5 commits
  7. 11 Jan, 2000 3 commits
  8. 10 Jan, 2000 1 commit
  9. 09 Jan, 2000 1 commit
  10. 08 Jan, 2000 2 commits
    • Lars Eilebrecht's avatar
      add missing compatiblity info · eaf893b9
      Lars Eilebrecht authored
      
      git-svn-id: https://svn.apache.org/repos/asf/httpd/httpd/trunk@84411 13f79535-47bb-0310-9956-ffa450edef68
      eaf893b9
    • Ralf S. Engelschall's avatar
      Make our nitpicking and complaining guys happy: · d46c7686
      Ralf S. Engelschall authored
      Added the mod_rewrite `URL Rewriting Guide' to the online documentation
      (htdocs/manual/misc/rewriteguide.html). This paper provides a large
      collection of practical solutions to URL based problems a webmaster is
      often confronted with.
      
      This version of the text was translated from my WML source on my website
      and my old official version is now discarded. So, as it was requested,
      this can be treated as an official donation of this text to the ASF.
      This way the ASF is now the official owner of this text.
      
                                     - - -
      
      <IRONIC>
      Be happy and give Ken and Jim the credit for achieving this by being
      such sensitive and friendly to other developers like me and always
      reminding us that it is such contemptuous to implicitly promote ones
      name by writing free software and contributing to projects like Apache.
      Sorry that I have forgotten to donate this piece of text to the ASF in
      the past and instead added such a contemptible hyperlink directing to a
      page on www.engelschall.com. I hope this is now fixed and the closed and
      holy ASF world is rescued again.
      </IRONIC>
      
      <PERSONAL>
      I think, I don't have to say that I'm more than angry and disappointed
      how developers like me are constantly bashed in the ASF... we can go for
      it also in the future, but we should stop looking astonished all the
      time if we find out that too less people contribute to the ASF and old
      developers like me no longer have a warm feeling here, please. It's our
      own fault in thinking that contributions are for free and anonymous just
      because our project is a group effort.
      
      IMHO we already have forgotten the golden rule of Open Source
      development: if one wants happy and long-term contributing developers
      one especially has to make sure they receive the requested credit.
      There is an upper limit a project can accept to give, of course. But
      credit always has to depend on the amount, quality _and_ duration of
      contribution and IMHO cannot be judged by stating that just all people
      are equal and so some contributors can be bashed for the fact that their
      name occurs more often.
      
      It is correct that my name occurs more often caused by the fact that I
      always try to bring in my stuff to the project. But keep in mind that
      this is because I _HAVE_ stuff to bring in which I've created _OUTSIDE_
      the project. So I think its unfair to bash me just because I try harder
      to bring in my additional stuff. If a developer has not much externally
      created stuff, he cannot bring it in to the project, of course. But just
      because one has more externally created stuff and tries to bring it in,
      is IMHO no reason and excuse to bash him for this. It's not my fault
      that I write in my freetime more Open Source packages like most of you.
      
      So if you dislike stuff developers want to bring in, decide on the
      contribution based on fair technical arguments (pros and cons). But
      don't judge the contributions all the time just because you think this
      way you "promote" someone (be it RSE, GNU or whoever else). Hell, an
      Open Source project is not a group of people to rule their own closed
      world and be celebrated in the press for this. It's still an effort to
      create the best piece of _software_ money can't buy. So you should stop
      thinking about contributors as our enemy. They are the main driving
      force of every project, although some people seem to not understand
      this at all. And whatever you think about my personal opinion, but
      IMHO it's not bad for a project if someone's name is "promoted" with
      it, too. What is actually bad are those complains and discussions
      which make developers angry and the fact that they result in even less
      contributions.
      </PERSONAL>
      
      
      git-svn-id: https://svn.apache.org/repos/asf/httpd/httpd/trunk@84409 13f79535-47bb-0310-9956-ffa450edef68
      d46c7686
  11. 07 Jan, 2000 4 commits
  12. 06 Jan, 2000 3 commits
  13. 04 Jan, 2000 1 commit
  14. 31 Dec, 1999 4 commits