This is to cut down on the number of files in bugs/, which makes it slow
to file new bug reports or update active bug reports. These old bugs
were about 1/3rd of the files in there. These projects want lists of
their old bugs to still be accessible, and have the lists on their
project pages, which will still list the old bugs.
Commands used:
for f in $(git grep -l '\[\[!tag projects/dandi\]\]'); do if grep -q 'done\]\]' "$f"; then git mv "$f" ../projects/dandi/bugs-done; g=$(echo "$f" | sed 's/.mdwn//'); if [ -d "$g" ]; then git mv "$g" ../projects/dandi/bugs-done; fi; fi; done
for f in $(git grep -l '\[\[!tag projects/repronim\]\]'); do if grep -q 'done\]\]' "$f"; then git mv "$f" ../projects/repronim/bugs-done; g=$(echo "$f" | sed 's/.mdwn//'); if [ -d "$g" ]; then git mv "$g" ../projects/repronim/bugs-done; fi; fi; done
for f in $(git grep -l '\[\[!tag projects/datalad\]\]'); do if grep -q 'done\]\]' "$f"; then git mv "$f" ../projects/datalad/bugs-done; g=$(echo "$f" | sed 's/.mdwn//'); if [ -d "$g" ]; then git mv "$g" ../projects/datalad/bugs-done; fi; fi; done
That assumes that bugs are not tagged by multiple projects at the same
time. Of the ones I moved, I've checked and none are.
Could do the same with todo/ but there are only 370 files in there, and
less than 84 of them could be moved this way, which does not seem likely
to produce a sizeable speedup.
Sponsored-by: Dartmouth College's Datalad project