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Date:      Thu, 20 Apr 1995 15:56:18 -0700
From:      "Jordan K. Hubbard" <jkh@freefall.cdrom.com>
To:        Gene Stark <gene@starkhome.cs.sunysb.edu>
Cc:        hackers@FreeBSD.org
Subject:   Re: Minutes of the Thursday, April 13th core team meeting in Berkeley. 
Message-ID:  <12952.798418578@freefall.cdrom.com>
In-Reply-To: Your message of "Thu, 20 Apr 95 00:13:20 EDT." <199504200413.AAA05141@starkhome.cs.sunysb.edu> 

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> Perhaps this idea is a bit radical, but I think it would be beneficial
> to separate the technical development goals of FreeBSD from the pressures
> to get a CD to market.  A method I have been applying to get decent
> snapshots to use is to build the world regularly, observing the general
> stability of the system and reading the mailing lists to assess the
> frequency of changes to key portions of the system.  When the frequency
> of key source changes appears to have reached a local minimum and the
> number of serious instability reports seems small, I try to roll a
> snapshot.

It's a perfectly reasonable idea, but it involves a fair bit of
discipline on the part of the release engineer, and up to now the
release-rolling process has been arcane enough that not many
(including us) could even figure it out well enough to generate a
release.

Perhaps, as rolling releases becomes easier and easier for the
lay-person to do, we'll have broader interest in this by people who's
SOLE interest is release engineering?  It's never been mine, but it
seems like folks like Poul and I have been getting stuck with it.  I'd
like this to change.

						Jordan



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