"Julian H. Stacey" <j...@berklix.com> writes: > I wasn't suggesting delaying releases, just how to smooth down alert > waves after releases.
So you're suggesting holding back advisories? > But I had forgotten inevitably some issues that people worked hard on > to meet releases, will just miss, & often continue to be worked hard > on, so more than usual is ready to be announced just after release. Not more than usual. There just happened to be a cluster immediately after 10.2. There was no such cluster after 10.1; three advisories were published four weeks after the release and a fourth a week after that. Besides, even if there were such a wave after each release, would it really matter? Most organizational users need weeks if not months to test a new version and plan its deployment, so that hypothetical wave would not affect them any more than any other batch of advisories. > Perhaps if core@ extend their presumed per release Thank You notes > to re@ & beyond "Thanks for rolling a release", & append "Please > take a short break, you deserve it + it will help minimise an > immediate post release notification wave". Might that help ? You want the security team to take a vacation after each release so we can maintain the illusion, at least for a couple of weeks, that there are no bugs or vulnerabilities in FreeBSD? DES -- Dag-Erling Smørgrav - d...@des.no _______________________________________________ freebsd-security@freebsd.org mailing list https://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-security To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-security-unsubscr...@freebsd.org"