Ingo Molnar wrote:
* Linus Torvalds <[email protected]> wrote:
I think the "big merges in the first two weeks, and a -rc1 after, and
no new code after that" rule has been working because it brought
everybody in on the same page.
yeah. I dont really support the even/odd release thing because even the
old 1.2/1.3/2.0/2.1/2.2/2.3/2.4 scheme _always_ confused non-insiders.
Sometimes i saw it confuse people who already understood the GPL ;-)
Furthermore it would just dillute our version numbers to encode some
information that "-rc1" indicates just as well. Insiders know perfectly
well that when -rc1 is released the merge window is closed. And what
causes -rc elongation is usually not the lack of communication towards
users or lack of testing but the lack of fixing power ...
OTOH, if we were worried about confusing people, we wouldn't be
using the acronym 'rc' for our 'Ridiculous Count', and have our rc1
denote the result of 2 weeks of stuffing the tree with new features
and intrusive changes, where people might mistake that for the much
more common RC-as-in-'Release Candidate'. :)
Our -rc is what everyone else knows as -pre, and our dot zeros
basically correspond to what people think of as a release candidate.
As a developer it doesn't hurt me and I do like the current system,
but in principle I just dislike things that are more confusing than
they could be.
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