Don't users need to upgrade to 3.0 because 3.1 won't be necessarily able to
read your
2.4 index file formats?  I suppose if you've already upgraded to 2.9, then
all is well because
2.9 is the same format as 3.0, but we can't assume all users upgraded from
2.4 to 2.9.

If you've done that already, then 3.0 might not be necessary, but if you're
on 2.4 right now,
you will be in for a bad surprise if you try to upgrade to 3.1.

  -jake

On Mon, Nov 16, 2009 at 10:10 AM, Erick Erickson <erickerick...@gmail.com>wrote:

> One of my "specialties" is asking obvious questions just to see if
> everyone's assumptions
> are aligned. So with the discussion about branching 3.0 I have to ask "Is
> there going to
> be any 3.0 release intended for *production*?". And if not, would we save a
> lot of work
> by just not worrying about retrofitting fixes to a 3.0 branch and carrying
> on with 3.1
> as the first *supported* 3.x release?
>
> Since 3.0 is "upgrade-to-java5 and remove deprecations", I'm not sure *as a
> user* I see a
> good reason to upgrade to 3.0. Getting a "beta/snapshot" release to get a
> head start on
> cleaning up my code does seem worthwhile, if I have the spare time. And
> having a base
> 3.0 version that's not changing all over the place would be useful for
> that.
>
> That said, I'm also not terribly comfortable with a "release" that's out
> there and unsupported.
>
> Apologies if this has already been discussed, but I don't remember it.
> Although my memory
> isn't what it used to be (but some would claim it never was<G>)...
>
> Erick
>
>
>

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