Re: [reSIProcate] build labels
- From: Alan Hawrylyshen <alan@xxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Mon, 17 Jan 2005 20:25:08 -0700
On Jan 17, 2005, at 15:59, Justin Matthews wrote:
Hello,
I am new user of resiprocate and have a question on integrating the
latest builds into my project. The project I am working on is
intended to
use the DUM, but there is not an official release that has the DUM. I
understand that the DUM is currently functional, but since there is no
stable baseline to pull from I am constantly checking this thread and
keeping up with changes to decide when to update my current codebase.
When
I update my codebase I am not sure how stable or feature complete the
code
is. Maybe this is not a valid question as the answer will be that I
have to
wait until the official next release that contains DUM, but to stay
current
with the latest in features this will pose a problem in the future. A
suggestion would be to label builds as nightly, latest stable, alpha,
beta
etc. as is done in other projects. Are there any plans or would the
developers be willing to do this? At the very least this would
provide some
information to avoid using a revision that contains partially
completed code
that someone is in the middle of working on. A latest stable release
for
example would not contain any partial implementations and I could at
least
use that as my new codebase, of course knowing there may be bugs.
Hi Justin;
In fact you bring up some useful points. There might be some
advantages to having some more formal guidelines for branching and
tagging in the project, HOWEVER, the overriding concern you bring up is
that we NEED to release a 'new stable' build soon. I will start down
this path and get a branch going for candidacy as our next stable
release. I believe we decided internally that it would be either 0.9 or
1.0, but this is an open discussion for all active developers and
designers.
So, since we (I) missed getting the release out prior to Christmas,
shall we take aim at a stable reSIProcate release pre-Valentine's Day
(Feb 14) ?
Thanks for the excellent questions.
Alan
--
Alan Hawrylyshen
reSIProcate Project Administrator
a l a n a t j a s o m i d o t c o m
--
a l a n a t j a s o m i d o t c o m