On Fri 21 Mar 2003 05:56, Brian J. Murrell posted as excerpted below: > On Fri, Mar 21, 2003 at 02:42:33PM +1200, Jason Greenwood wrote: > > Will 9.1 Final ISO's hit the mirrors?? > > I would like to know this too. > > Just what are we waiting for? I don't recall any of this kind of wait > with past releases. ISO's came on the heels of the mandrake_release > RPM finally being updated.
This is just speculation on my part, but I'm guessing the lack of ISOs has to do with the kernel problem folks have mentioned here repeatedly. It seems a security vuln and kernel patch was released at the last minute, to late for the normal process of verification and inclusion on the release ISOs. Never-the-less, the patch was added, and the corrected Kernel packages created and delivered. The problem appears to be that in the confusion of doing this at the last minute, without the normal verification and etc. someone made a mistake, and reused a previous kernel release number for the new kernel RPMs. Unfortunately, this means the various automated tools don't see the new kernel as a change from the previous one, and don't pick up that RPM. At the same time, the official list along with sizes and probably the MD5 checksums include and are based on the new kernel version, that the automated tools don't pick up, because it looks to them the same as an old one. Thus, there are all sorts of errors. That brings us to the human side. My guess is that in the work-up to the release, days off and other such things were skipped, and as soon as it was out the door, pretty much everyone left for the weekend, to catch up on the days off and such. It's also possible that a number of folks were leaving Mdk to be effective at 9.1 release, due to the continual streamlining due to the financial problems. These folks will now have cleared out their desk and be gone permanently. Anyway, the problem is likely that the automated tools can't fix the problem as outlined above, and anybody that can do anything about it took off until next week. Likewise, anyone in a position to make an official comment on it is off for the weekend, as it was supposed to be all out and all good, by now. Maybe someone will check back in today (Saturday) to see how things are going, realize the problem, and come fix it. More likely, it won't be fixed now until Monday, as someone else mentioned. In either case, it shouldn't be a huge problem, it's just the matter of poor timing of that last minute vuln and patch, combined with the normally minor kernel RPM versioning mistake, has things a bit confused, while everyone's out for a well deserved rest after working real hard to get the release done, and no one's there now that can do much about it. That's my admittedly gallery viewpoint opinion on what's likely going on, anyway, FWIW.. -- Duncan "They that can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety, deserve neither liberty nor safety." -- Benjamin Franklin
