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Date:      Thu, 12 Feb 1998 00:55:15 +0800 (WST)
From:      Adrian Chadd <adrian@obiwan.creative.net.au>
To:        Jonathan Lemon <jlemon@americantv.com>
Cc:        current@FreeBSD.ORG
Subject:   Re: Hollywood (Re: PATCH.M )
Message-ID:  <Pine.BSF.3.95q.980212005051.1744B-100000@obiwan.creative.net.au>
In-Reply-To: <19980211101825.53750@right.PCS>

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On Wed, 11 Feb 1998, Jonathan Lemon wrote:

> On Feb 02, 1998 at 11:39:17PM +0800, Adrian Chadd wrote:
> > But its tried. If she no work, then they back the change out. Its worked
> > for them.. you try the ideas out. If it doesn't work in -current, you back
> > it out. Or fix it until it does. Then you bring it into -release. Or have
> > I like missed something totally about how its meant to work?
> 
> I think so.  From my understanding, -current isn't intended to be a dumping
> ground for new features, it's more like a final shakedown where the bugs
> can get ironed out.  If you have a new feature, (like the CAM work, timing
> wheel changes, or SMP ability) then these should be hammered out in the
> developer's own release branch until they are stable.  Then, after others 
> have had a chance to test them out as well, they are brought into -current.

I assume Terry wouldn't be putting forward patches that didn't work. And
hadn't been throughly tested.

> 
> Of course, at this point, several things may break, since the developer may
> not have been able to test all the various kernel permutations on their
> machine.  But usually, the fundamental code is fairly stable, and it it just
> a matter of squashing some last bugs, not making major changes to the code.

If I mention VM code would someone kill me? :-) (Not taking a personal
attack at anyone here, so please don't read it as such.. :)

Its not like stuff has been changed in -current before that hasn't
horrendously broken things in a big way and take ages to fix.

> > </RANT>
> 
> Error: end tag detected with no corresponding opening tag.  :-)

Damn. And I deleted the top <RANT> while editing the email. Thanks for
reminding me. :)

Now, I wonder whats going to happen in the 8 hours I'll be sleeping.. :)

Adrian

-- 
Adrian Chadd			|  "I used to be thin, handsome and smart.
<adrian@creative.net.au>	|    Then I discovered UNIX."
				|  



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