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The transition from the Dragonfly Project to the AIT framework is governed by the desire to make large parts of the previously proprietary Dragonfly Project available as an open source. This is a multi-year effort given the time we have to spare for this project; consequently the target framework is not open to contributions that would extend its scope beyond what we can reasonably manage.
Only five percent of the effort to actually get something shipped is writing the code for it. It's the years of maintenance afterwards, fixing bugs, writing documentation, making tutorials, and all this other stuff. That’s the hard part.
Mike Melanson, 9th of May 2023, The GitHub ReadME project
That said, contributions may be considered when:
They help automate, maintain and further support the existing code base;
They help improve the overall performance of the framework(a) (a) While maintaining the same architectural design and not introducing new dependencies. A typical use case here is the rewriting of scripts into a supported compiled programming language (i.e. C/C++, Go, Rust).
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The transition from the Dragonfly Project to the AIT framework is governed by the desire to make large parts of the previously proprietary Dragonfly Project available as an open source. This is a multi-year effort given the time we have to spare for this project; consequently the target framework is not open to contributions that would extend its scope beyond what we can reasonably manage.
That said, contributions may be considered when:
They help automate, maintain and further support the existing code base;
They help improve the overall performance of the framework(a)
(a) While maintaining the same architectural design and not introducing new dependencies. A typical use case here is the rewriting of scripts into a supported compiled programming language (i.e. C/C++, Go, Rust).
They repair or extend broken functionality
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