On Tue, 18 Nov 2003, Andrew Dunstan wrote: > Josh Berkus wrote: > > >Guys, > > > >I agree with Neil ... it's not the length of the development part of the > >cycle, it's the length of the beta testing. > > > >I do think an online bug tracker (bugzilla or whatever) would help. I also > >think that having a person in charge of "testing" would help as well ... no > >biggie, just someone whose duty it is to e-mail people in the community and > >ask about the results of testing, especially on the more obscure ports. I > >think a few e-mail reminders would do a *lot* to speed things up. But I'm > >not volunteering for this job; managing the release PR is "herding cats" > >enough! > > > > Maybe some sort of automated distributed build farm would be a good > idea. Check out http://build.samba.org/about.html to see how samba does > it (much lighter than the Mozilla tinderbox approach). > > We wouldn't need to be as intensive as they appear to be - maybe a once > or twice a day download and test run would do the trick, but it could > pick up lots of breakage fairly quickly. > > That is not to say that more intensive testing isn't also needed on > occasion.
Check the archives on this, as its been hashed out already once at least ... I think the big issue/problem is that nobody seems able (or wants) to come up with a script that could be setup in cron on machines to do this ... something simple that would dump the output to a log file and, if regression tests failed, email'd the machine owner that it needs to be checked would do, I would think ... ---------------------------(end of broadcast)--------------------------- TIP 3: if posting/reading through Usenet, please send an appropriate subscribe-nomail command to [EMAIL PROTECTED] so that your message can get through to the mailing list cleanly