2019-03-18 - Re: [GRASE-Hotspot] Expecting updates

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From: emre erdoğan <po***e@gmail.com>
Message Hash: f83f0f6ec8bd36e141188c66e5605a5cbb1078f03de8b0a5ba71b2c230f69159
Message ID: <CADDedMH0T4Pzv6+tX1Hp4i_rovU4XZjMuB4zH4Q=QknpFmXgnw@mail.gmail.com>
Reply To: <CAESLx0LPqunSpkR54ErTSB8aikmapE4986HrKg4HW+_WQ9z0bA@mail.gmail.com>
UTC Datetime: 2019-03-18 14:52:21 UTC
Raw Date: Tue, 19 Mar 2019 00:52:21 +0300

Raw message

Hello everyone.

Open source project is not just volunteering. It also means trust. If you
trust the software and the software developer, you will continue.

Tim, thank you very much. You gave us this nice software. I'm using this
software in 20 locations. I made some changes myself. I integrated it into
some hotel softwares. I was able to communicate with Opera PMS to create an
automatic User on check-in. If you could have done these things, maybe you
wouldn't complain that much. Because the more I studied the codes, the more
I realized how much Tim worked with it. A very complicated system... Many
of these similar projects are not so stable. If only you were aware of how
valuable the software is...

Tim, I'm grateful to you. Please continue. Thanks for everything. I hope
it's always good for your family and you.

19 Mar 2019 Sal 00:05 tarihinde Tim <ti***8@gmail.com> şunu yazdı:

> Hi All
>
> I have previously explained this, and will explain it again. The reason
> for the delay in updates, is PHP7. Both Ubuntu and Debian moved on to PHP7,
> which is a great thing. However, the Grase Hotspot started > 10 years ago
> (it was in SVN, then BZR then git, hence the git commits only go back to
> 2010). PHP7 might not have seen like a big deal, and my plan in 2016 was to
> make the minor changes to move to PHP7, how hard could it be, I'd worked on
> projects at work that did exactly that.... We'll, as it would turn out, we
> had used a pear database library, and also the legacy mysql_ PHP functions.
> Neither of which could be dragged kicking and screaming into PHP7 land.
>
> I'd also like to point out, that in 2016, when trying to do this, PHP7
> hadn't landed in Debian at this stage, that didn't happen until 2017.
> Trying to keep this running on Debian and Ubuntu simultaneously shouldn't
> be hard, they are so similar, but the releases cycles make it a pain! The
> good news is, moving forward we'll have different repositories for
> Debian/Ubuntu and for each LTS version of them, so we can continue updating
> the different branches as required, moving forward on Ubuntu without having
> to wait for the next Debian release, and then when the next Debian release
> comes out, it can be up to date with the latest Ubuntu etc. I want to
> support both Debian and Ubuntu, Debian as a more solid platform, and Ubuntu
> because it's actually used by lots of organisations as their base image,
> and lots of newer users are familiar enough with getting it running.
>
> So, PHP7 and legacy mysql. How to best attack this? There are 2 options,
> one is to hack fix around the issues. Replace all mysql_ with mysqli_
> functions. But then the pear database library, that also needed replacing.
> What to replace it with.... The second option, rewrite the core
> functionality on a modern framework (these didn't exist when the project
> started), which will not only bring us to PHP7, it'll also give us a much
> cleaner and secure code base that hopefully others can contribute on.
>
> As you may guess, I choose the better of the 2 options, at the risk of it
> taking longer to get the next major version released. Rewriting the core
> functionality. You can watch the progress at
> https://github.com/GraseHotspot/grase-www-portal/tree/symfony4
>
> As an open source project, my development is always on display. You can
> see exactly how much or how little I'm getting done. This is great news for
> you all. If you think the project is dead, (by your measurement), then it's
> dead, and you can go find a replacement. If however, you want this project
> to continue, you can contribute financially or with code, and you can also
> watch the progress (however slow it may be). If no one shows interest in
> the project, I'll kill it. I've asked on the list a few times if people
> still are interested in it, and the response I get is a yes.
>
> Now why, even with people donating, is it still taking time? As explained
> before, I have a family, and I have a full time job. These both take time,
> and yes, they are both more important to me than the Grase Hotspot. I'm not
> a code monkey churning out code for peanuts, I'm a human that loves his
> family, and has a job to support his family. I also love spending time with
> my family, and will choose to do that before I work on the Grase Hotspot.
> If you don't like that, feel free to use an alternative project out there
> instead of this.
> There really is only so much work I can do on the train during my commute,
> and on my weekends. I'm not sure how it is for other parts of the world, or
> jobs, but by the time I come home in the evening, and spend time with my
> family, getting the kids fed and into bed, I don't have a lot of time until
> I have to sleep and start it again the next day! And weekends get pretty
> busy with family, life, house maintenance etc as well. This is life. I'm
> not a teenager with piles of time on my hands that I spend gaming or
> coding. I'm an adult with the responsibilities of life, and as much as I
> wish I could just code, I can't.
>
> So why the donations you ask? Firstly, to show that there are people who
> want this project to live, and are willing to contribute somehow to see
> that happen. Secondly, to hopefully get to a stage where I can work at my
> full time job less (say part time) and dedicate some days a month to the
> Grase Hotspot. Realistically, that's the only way to see significant
> development happen.
> Lastly, the donations help keep the servers on. For years, I have paid for
> the server hosting myself, domain names, etc. It's not much, but it adds
> up. The servers are mostly paid for by a few other clients I host websites
> for. However, I don't actively seek hosting clients, I only do it for a few
> small not for profits that approached me needing a better webhost than they
> were getting. Because of this, there has always been a shortfall in the
> cost of the servers that I pay and to me that shortfall is the "Grase
> Hotspot" hosting costs. Believe it or not, my web hosting "business" hasn't
> turned a profit in many years and that's ok.
>
> Please, if you wish to see this project get updated, find a way to
> contribute. Either with code, donations, write documentation, or even just
> helping on the mailing list when people have problems. Previously people
> have also contributed with translations (both of the website and the code),
> this will be something that's needed again further down the track once we
> are closer to a release.
>
> Again, if you believe this project is dead, that's ok. Please find an
> alternative. If everyone believes it's dead, then we can kill it, but until
> then, I'll keep working on it when I can, for those people who believe in
> it.
>
> To all the contributors out there, yes, even those who just help on the
> mailing list, thank you, without you this project would be dead. I hope
> you'll continue supporting me so we can release a new version.
>
> Regards
>
> Tim
>
> On Mon, 18 Mar 2019 at 17:09, shirish bandarkar <
> sh***r@gmail.com> wrote:
>
>> Dear Tim
>>
>> January 10, 2016 was the last update of Grase. Whooping three years....
>>
>> With the fast evolving technologies such delayed updates are not good.
>>
>> Request you to look into the development and add new features like MAC
>> binding, multiple WAN support, etc...
>>
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>>
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