Adam, There's no real pattern to the builds. I tend to build new "nightly" releases whenever I notice an interesting change get landed, or whenever I have some idle CPU cycles. As Alexey mentions, having access to built historical copies of WebKit makes tracking down regressions to a narrow time frame possbile.
Cheers, Mark Rowe > No that's fine, I was really just curious as to why there were so > many each day. I was mainly wondering if there's some sort of pattern > to their release. > > Adam Bryzak > > On 2006-10-20, at 7:07 PM, Alexey Proskuryakov wrote: > >> On 19.10.2006 11:18, "Adam Bryzak" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: >> >>> Is it just me or are the nightly builds updated really frequently, >>> like multiple times per day? It's getting hard to keep up! >> >> Frequent builds are very helpful for figuring out when regressions >> happened, and also they let people try new features and fixes soon. >> >> I am not aware of associated problems that could outweigh these >> benefits. >> Do you have some specific need to try each nightly build? Making >> them rarer >> is undesirable, but perhaps we could come up with some other >> solution then. >> >> - WBR, Alexey Proskuryakov >> >> > _______________________________________________ > webkit-dev mailing list > webkit-dev@opendarwin.org > http://www.opendarwin.org/mailman/listinfo/webkit-dev > _______________________________________________ webkit-dev mailing list webkit-dev@opendarwin.org http://www.opendarwin.org/mailman/listinfo/webkit-dev