On 2007-12-13 10:54:47 (+0000), Tuomo Valkonen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > On 2007-12-13, Philip Paeps <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > I have not gone awol. I replied to your email about the port being out of > > date the day after you sent it. > > Closer to two days...
Yes. > > It is not particularly difficult to comply with the licence. It just > > takes a bit of time (which I'm happy to spend) to keep up with new > > releases. Of course, sometimes new releases will coincide with ports > > freezes. > > This time the thaw came quite in time (or did I cause it?-), and maybe the > period could have been even a bit longer if people would communicate about > such things. I'm fairly sure you didn't cause the thaw. :-) > However, there's still the problem of binary packages ending up in the > release snapshots without prominent notices of obsoleteness. The FreeBSD ports tree is not "pegged" to releases as in other systems. So if a -release user downloads a ports tree, he gets the same tree as someone who is using -current. You do have a point that "obsolete" versions will end up on the snapshots of the ports tree on cds. We have a perfectly good mechanism for dealing with this, it's called NO_CDROM. I would be happy to add this to the Makefile. > I don't think RCs and development snapshots should end up there at all. I don't share your opinion about RCs. Regarding development snapshots, however, the port was named 'ion3-devel' until the first RC - indicating quite clearly that building it gave you software in development. The only reason I did the rename at RC-time was because I thought a release would happen 'real soon' after. It didn't. Note that I'm not complaining about your release schedule. I should have waited with the repocopy until after the release. My fault. > That's the problem with distros' megafreezes: you can't sync the development > of thousands of packages. And as for stable releases, even they should get > bugfixes promptly. Maybe the 28 day limit can be relaxed in such cases a > bit, but even half a year may be too long -- two years like with Debian is > certainly too long. I don't think there has ever been a FreeBSD ports freeze which lasted as long as six months, let alone two years. Generally a month or so is the order of magnitude. > It depends on the bug at hand: segfaults should be fixed very promptly, > whereas minor glitches are not that big deal. During ports freezes, approval from portmgr can be saught to fix things like segfaults. - Philip -- Philip Paeps Please don't Cc me, I am [EMAIL PROTECTED] subscribed to the list. BOFH Excuse #180: ether leak _______________________________________________ freebsd-ports@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-ports To unsubscribe, send any mail to "[EMAIL PROTECTED]"