I recently saw the graceful tag on a question that attempted to describe a way to "finalize gracefully". There are currently 30 questions tagged graceful, and the tag wiki is empty.
- 20 of them have to do with gracefully shutting down something
- 4 of them deal with gracefully restarting
- 2 of them mention graceful "solutions"
- 1 of them deals with graceful reload
- 1 of them deals with graceful start/stop
- 1 of them has to do with a Go package called "graceful",
- and the other one is the "finalize gracefully" question I saw recently.
Here are the burnination criteria:
Does it describe the contents of the questions to which it is applied? and is it unambiguous?
It describes the contents, but not by itself, with the exception of the lonely one question about the Go package. It appears to be a meta tag.
Is the concept described even on-topic for the site?
It may be on topic, but "graceful" by itself doesn't mean anything.
Does the tag add any meaningful information to the post?
One would certainly prefer a graceful shutdown to not being able clean up your resources, but it doesn't add any information by itself.
Does it mean the same thing in all common contexts?
Most questions mean "graceful shutdown"; some of them even have graceful shutdown. But no, it doesn't mean the same thing in all common contexts.
A go-graceful tag may be justifiable, but there is only one question on it. A graceful-shutdown tag may be justifiable.
Should there be a graceful-shutdown, or should there just be a graceful shutdown?
go-graceful
, should we makegraceful
a synonym? This will make it less likely someone will recreate thegraceful
tag in order to use it as a meta tag on a graceful shutdown question later.