>You can keep the date, but other Apache products as tomcat and spark use
build date as files' date
What is the issue with fixed timestamps?
I strongly believe that reproducible builds are more important than updated
timestamps in the archives.
So if you want both reproducibility and timestamps,
You can keep the date, but other Apache products as tomcat and spark use
build date as files' date
On Tue, May 19, 2020 at 7:00 PM Vladimir Sitnikov <
sitnikov.vladi...@gmail.com> wrote:
> Felix>Plus, it probably is set that way by default to enable reproducible
> Felix>builds. The timestamp is
Felix>Plus, it probably is set that way by default to enable reproducible
Felix>builds. The timestamp is the same no matter where or when it was
build.
The timestamps are constants for build reproducibility indeed.
One can download source files (e.g. source release artifacts),
build it and the
Am 19.05.20 um 16:53 schrieb Felix Schumacher:
> Am 19.05.20 um 16:05 schrieb Jmeter Tea:
>> Hello,
>>
>> I wanted to know why all jmeter download files' date is 1/2/1980?
> Good question, but that is true only for the zip file. The tar one has a
> date of Janua
Am 19.05.20 um 16:05 schrieb Jmeter Tea:
> Hello,
>
> I wanted to know why all jmeter download files' date is 1/2/1980?
Good question, but that is true only for the zip file. The tar one has a
date of January 2nd 1970 :)
It seems that this is a feature of gradle. The default is t
Hello,
I wanted to know why all jmeter download files' date is 1/2/1980?
Thank you