On Mon, 2009-01-26 at 16:07 -0800, Jesse Keating wrote:
But Fedora /releases/ aren't your personal rawhide. We're
providing
releases that are supposed to stay somewhat stable, not to just be a
dumping ground for whatever upstream chooses to drop the day before. We
have a developmental stream for that, and it makes releases fairly
often. I just don't understand why we want to treat our /release/
branches as if they were just another rawhide.
Agree completely.
Another worrying sentiment I heard lately was that it makes sense to
push a new, untested upstream release into updates-testing so that it
actually gets testing because "no-one runs rawhide".
The idea being that if you disable the bodhi-karma-auto-push thing, then
it won't hit updates until all the wrinkles have been ironed out.
To me that's just wrong - if someone enables updates-testing, they
shouldn't be immediately exposed to new upstream release. IMHO, the
process should be:
a) push to rawhide and let stew
b) if there's some serious bug fix or important user feature requested
that can't be trivially backported, then push to updates-testing
c) push to updates
Cheers,
Mark.