On Sat, Mar 04, 2006 at 01:02:20PM +0100, Marc 'HE' Brockschmidt wrote: > Though Martin 'Joey' Schulze as stable release manager presents lists of > packages that are accepted into the next stable point release on a > regular basis, they normally are not released "roughly two months after > the last update" (which is the official plan). > > Do you know why this doesn't work as planned? What would you do to > make regular point releases possible?
The biggest part of the reason here that actually doing the releases take a fair bit of work to implement with the current infrastructure. Changes are currently being implemented to improve the handling of proposed-updates, in order to have those point releases happing more easily. It'll still require an ftp-master to find the time to do it, and there can be any number of reasons why nobody finds the time to do it -- Debian being volunteer-driven as it is. I personally don't think it's a huge issue if those point releases are not 100% regular, because for the majority it's security updates, but it's still good to have them not too far apart, esp. for those updates that are not also already distributed via security.debian.org. With significantly less effort required each time from the side of ftp-master, I think stable point releases can happen more regularly. There can be other ways to improve too, but not by direct intervention from the DPL role -- a DPL should not want to micro-manage. It's not something I see as a priority to improve though, I don't think the current situation is unaccepteable or so. Our real releases are much more important. As DPL, I want to focus most of my energy on a limited amount of areas, better do a few things good, than a lot of them only a bit. --Jeroen -- Jeroen van Wolffelaar [EMAIL PROTECTED] (also for Jabber & MSN; ICQ: 33944357) http://Jeroen.A-Eskwadraat.nl -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]

