On Mon, Apr 19, 2004 at 06:11:27PM +0200, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > Hi all, > > I'd like to raise a question on cvsup. > I'm an enthousiastic user of cvsup to keep up to date. > I always use to stable-supfile > Last week I installed a 4.9 machine ran a cvsup. > Rebuilt the whole world and my kernel and ... ended up with > 4.10 beta. > A few aday later ran a cvsup again. Same story. > > I know FBSD is stable but do I have to rely beta's.
Ah... It's that time of year again. We get to do the whole 'what is 4-STABLE' thread for the umpteenth time. Here's how it works: you're tracking the RELENG_4 code branch, which gets you system version 4.x-STABLE -- well, most of the time. Actually, that system version number and tag is pretty arbitrary. It's just a snapshot out of the ever-evolving set of code which is the RELENG_4 branch. Every so often the will be a new release made from this branch. Usually something like 3 times a year. Around that point the system version will go through all sorts of changes relatively quickly. It will start as 4.9-STABLE, then become 4.10-BETA. After a while it will become 4.10-RC (as in 'Release Candidate'), and maybe even 4.10-RC2. Eventually the release engineering team will be satisfied, and the label will become 4.10-RELEASE. However, that only lasts for a vanishingly short time: just long enough to create the RELENG_4_10 branch. Then the label becomes 4.10-STABLE again for the next 3 months or so. (Well, actually in this case, probably for ever after, as 4.10 is the last release planned to be made from the RELENG_4 branch.) Do not be alarmed by the what the label says. There are not massive changes to the source code happening at the precise instant the the change from -STABLE to -BETA is made. Those changes will have been going into RELENG_4 continually throughout the preceeding months[1]. In fact, what -BETA signifies is an emphasis on testing and bug-fixing rather than introducing new functionality. That means the -BETA code is actually probably a bit more stable that the -STABLE code, although there's really very little measurable difference. With all of the testing being done, the code should reach a peak of perfection right around the time that 4.10 is released, although (annoyingly) each release does tend to generate a small flood of PRs and fixes immediately *after* it happens. Cheers, Matthew [1] If you find this alarming, then you should be tracking one of the X.Y-RELEASE branches: those only get security and major bug fixes. -- Dr Matthew J Seaman MA, D.Phil. 26 The Paddocks Savill Way PGP: http://www.infracaninophile.co.uk/pgpkey Marlow Tel: +44 1628 476614 Bucks., SL7 1TH UK
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