-
-
Notifications
You must be signed in to change notification settings - Fork 4.1k
New issue
Have a question about this project? Sign up for a free GitHub account to open an issue and contact its maintainers and the community.
By clicking “Sign up for GitHub”, you agree to our terms of service and privacy statement. We’ll occasionally send you account related emails.
Already on GitHub? Sign in to your account
QA issues due to excessive focus on new features #34351
Comments
Problem is, Nextcloud is indeed open-source, but not community driven. One example: on the last 100 issues, maybe 2 or 3 had core-team input. They're not even triaged, let's not talk about fixing them. (probably, what will happen to this one too...) Bugs are fixed, if:
At nextcloud/groupfolders#1215 (comment) it is pointed that:
Which demonstrates well where the focus is: features, features, features, marketing.
Community only exists today to "submit a PR, or wait for it to, maybe... one day... be fixed". 😞 Without a 180° strategy change, what Nextcloud need is a Community driven fork. |
I'm very curious how you expect that to work out. What would happen if you forked Nextcloud? 'cuz you can, you know. It's very easy. |
I didn't say I (me) would do it. I was speaking about a community. But having a good Nextcloud Server (serving files) instead of a "big commercial Hub" would be a good thing. This is what community was expecting when Owncloud was forked, not a Microsoft/Google challenger with features, features and more features. Because today, Nextcloud is serving "other interests" than having a stable Server (I repeat, Server). |
What are you aiming at? I think you know what @solracsf meant. Of course forking is easy, but creating a community to maintain a sustainable and successful fork is not. |
@fschrempf it is unfortunate that the way this is phrased drives it to fail, because it lacks the tact of your group folders issue from 2021.
I think this helped get so much developer feedback on the groupfolders issue in 2021, but you seem to have forgotten that you are not owed anything... absolutely nothing. No one on the team owes us free users anything at all, and I doubt adding a lot of quotes makes your post any more appealing.
I would ask you the same rhetorical question, because this will no doubt rapidly continue to devolve into a very unproductive, locked thread. Since you prefer being very blunt, let's be blunt as random users who give nothing to the server repo and ask for everything in return. You have no desire to personally assist in fixing any of these issues, yes? In that case there is nothing more to demand. Report bugs, yes. Ask for blunt updates on status, maybe if they have time... although I do not expect even this response. I do agree with your frustrations on technical landmines in need of address, but this does not feel productive:
But they don't have to respond, nor do any of these things. So don't pressure them, because I want to quote you and your excellent, older wording in my own way: I don't blame anyone. I really appreciate the huge amount of work all of you put into this, I really do! If you can think of new ways to connect with the community we'd love to make more meaningful contributions! But, we also understand that your paid time is dedicated to your support contracts, because those users are the ones paying for your time and development. The community in this instance are those users willing to create Pull Requests, or code their own Nextcloud apps in order to add the functionality they want... if that sounds difficult it is because I lack the skills needed to actually help. Perhaps someone else in the community is willing to offer solutions..? No one from the team has lied to us on where their development time goes. If this is not the self hosted tool for you... well, maybe that is the answer. |
@sunjam I agree with almost everything you wrote, specially this:
But:
My only question is (and this is what I've stated earlier, maybe it was not clear, so let be me more clear); what's the point to have Issues tab on Github (bug reports) if they're mostly ignored? Why not open Github to contributions only (PRs) and move all "community discussions" to https://help.nextcloud.com? A lot of Open Source projects work like this (open contributions only); at least, users don't get this feeling of wasting their time writing bug reports that no-one will even read (triage) or taken care of. My whole point is this one, not Nextcloud's vision. Because, as you've stated:
|
(edit: I would say bug reporting is a thankless, volunteer task, which is also super important. Thank you if you report bugs and help them get seen + fixed more quickly.) I think you accurately describe the situation, because PR's are what is asked for. Still, I greatly appreciate that we are allowed to post thoughts without making code contributions. My opinion, I super appreciate being able to write up suggestions as-is, which I'm sure can be tiresome, if not unhelpful to the developers themselves as often as not.
I think the best we can do, aside from coding, is to write quality bug reports while putting our best foot forward in showing total respect to all of the great work we already benefit from... no way is any number of bug reports more work than actually maintaining Nextcloud. If possible, I'd love to be able to continue having discussions, although I think help.nextcloud.com is a much better place to talk freely without demanding developer attention with each reply. Perhaps we could continue a similar discussion there more focused on practical solutions and respect. Later! |
This is exactly where problem is; here, there is no developer attention. As an example (there are many others) of good maintained Git issues, where issues are triaged, assigned, answered, PRs on the way, etc., see: https://github.com/netdata/netdata/issues As a bug reporter, you're pleased to see that, for developers, aside paid customers (because yeah, FOSS may be open, may be free to use, but certainly it's not free to maintain) they actually care about the software and it's quality. This is what this is all about, IMHO. |
I think you misunderstand me. I do not have forgotten that. This is not about claiming any responsibility from anyone to fix technical issues. I still adhere to the same tone that I used in the groupfolders issue you quoted, even if I didn't express it so clearly here. The quotes I added to the post are simply there to support my own opinion and make clear that this is not an issue that only I'm experiencing, but a fundamental issue that affects many and does harm to NC. They were also added to raise awareness of the public response for those that are not yet aware of it.
Yes I prefer being blunt as this is kind of a last resort and it seems like other approaches have failed. And I'm very far from those users who give nothing and ask everything. I'm totally aware of my position and I respect every decision of the core developers or management. I simply want to challenge them to think about what they are doing. If they don't care it's sad but I will accept it and move on. You should treat this issue not as a complaint. This is ought to be constructive feedback especially targeted at people like @karlitschek, @jospoortvliet and @jancborchardt who (as far as I know) are decision makers at NC and would have the possibility to adjust the course of NC development on a basic level. |
Indeed, without proper integration and maintenance of a healthy community a project like NC won't work. It's not only about core developers responding to issues (the capacity is very limited here as we have seen). It's also about integrating people from the community in the development process and assigning responsibilities. I picked up a point from @ChristophWurst in the other thread about this topic. I've added the community aspect to the first post above as I consider this equally crucial as the other aspects mentioned. |
Dear all, First of all I would like to share with you I have discussed your concerns internally and with several community contributors. I can see you put a lot of time in writing this we understand your frustrations. I am going to close this thread and I would like you to understand why. This is a very polarising atmosphere in every reply. Tagging Frank, Jos, or other top managers is like calling Steve Jobs (R.I.P.) because your Macbook is not functional. Our goal is to create a lovely community with which I mean respectful and helpful and we would not like to accept these intense ways of phrasing and communicating. Some of the concerns you raised, like the process around bug reports, are well known and not new. We have asked for qualitative and constructive feedback in our community survey last year and we have read every reply and analysed the results. The issues that were often raised are reflected upon internally and where realistic, acted upon. You have to realise what kind of emotional impact your thread has had on people who have been working day and night to create a mind-blowing release. I do not accept putting our lovely team of contributors and employees under this emotional pressure in our community. @sunjam already gave plenty of suggestions how to better contribute in the future and I would really love to thank him for supporting our community. |
@DaphneMuller This will be my last post in this thread as I respect your decision to lock it. Still I would like to reply to your statement and clarify a few things that might have been misinterpreted. I hope you won't mind.
Thanks for the effort and the statement. I really appreciate it. My main motivation is not frustration but rather concern about the future of the NC project. In general I really like it and respect and appreciate all the work that is being done.
I get your point, but the analogy doesn't really fit in my opinion. It would, if this is a bug report, but it's more intended to be an open letter.
Thanks for mentioning this and for pursuing this goal.
If my way of communication was harmful to someone I want to apologize. This was not my intention and I still adhere to what I wrote in nextcloud/groupfolders#1215 (comment): Please note, that I don't mean to blame anyone. I really appreciate the huge amount of work all of you put into this.
It seems like I missed that there is something such as the community survey. I just had a look at the 2021 results and it's good to hear that you are actively gathering feedback and try to take it into account.
Again, the focus of my arguments is not about better contributions. It is about changing the overall strategy of the project. I know perfectly well what efforts are needed to get all those small things done and that there are plenty of tiresome tasks. As I said before, I'm not just a thankless, ranting user who fails to understand how open-source projects are working. In 2021 I spent plenty of hours of my sparse free time to help triaging issues in the groupfolders app because I know that many helping hands are needed to get somewhere. |
@fschrempf thank you for your constructive reply ❤️ |
I'm deleting your comment Jos, because this discussion is closed for reasons outlined above. |
How to use GitHub
Is your feature request related to a problem? Please describe.
The NC development and releases have a strong focus on adding new features while leaving behind important tasks like:
My impression is, that this leads to issues with (code) quality, stability, performance, user experience, etc. One example is the groufolders app that is considered by many to provide core functionality, but didn't act up to the expectations in the past (see nextcloud/groupfolders#1215 for details).
This impression seems to be shared by others. Some examples of public voices:
1 Norbert Rüthers, June 2022 (Deepl translation)
2 Schroeffu, July 2021 (Deepl translation)
3 Gerrit Heim, May 2022 (Deepl translation)
4 Ferdinand Thommes, June 2022 (Deepl translation)
Reading about the strategy of NC founder @karlitschek, I don't get the impression that the focus will be shifted towards aiming at a more sustainable and stable product. It rather sounds like the previous course of adding new features at all costs will be continued.
5 Frank Karlitschek, June 2022
Being able to compete with other products on the market in regards of features doesn't help in the long run if basic functionality lacks stability and causes users to turn away, which is actually happening right now.
Describe the solution you'd like
Aiming for a full-featured groupware alternative is all right, but please maintain a certain level of quality and stability for the core features that people can live with.
Providing privacy-friendly alternatives is an important task but these alternatives need to be functional and until all groupware features can compete with their proprietary counterparts, people want to use only a subset of (core) features, which for NC is file sharing.
I suggest for Nextcloud GmbH to:
Feel free to let me know what you think!
Thanks in advance for any response!
Footnotes
https://gnulinux.ch/seafile-das-verkannte-syncing-tool ↩
https://schroeffu.ch/2021/07/warum-ich-von-nextcloud-server-zu-seafile-gewechselt-bin/ ↩
https://curius.de/2022/05/seafile-als-open-source-cloudspeicher-unuebertroffen/ ↩
https://linuxnews.de/2022/06/seafile-die-bessere-next-cloud/ ↩
https://karlitschek.de/2019/08/nextcloud-strategy/ ↩
The text was updated successfully, but these errors were encountered: