Paul Schmehl
Sun, 08 Jun 2008 12:25:50 -0700
Just to be clear here, Adrian's claim that if someone else provided patches for 6.2, they would be committed, is incorrect. The cost of committing the patch is almost zero -- the cost of QA'ing the patch, doing freebsd-update rebuilds, preparing security or errata notices, etc, is extremely real, and the reason that we carefully limit the number of releases we support at once. In fact, I'd argue that we have been supporting too many releases at once, as I think our latency for shipping errata notices and advisories is too high. By reducing the number of releases we support, we improve the speed and attention we can give each notice/advisory, which is an important consideration.
What would be the most beneficial boost to FreeBSD? Would it be cash? Additional developers?
Does FreeBSD have anyone who works fulltime (IOW, is paid)? Would more fulltime workers alleviate the issues you've articulated? Paul Schmehl If it isn't already obvious, my opinions are my own and not those of my employer.