On average, there is a new <span class="proflinkWrapper"><span class="proflin...
On average, there is a new +systemd release every 16 days!
Recently I had a gut feeling that the releases oscillate between longer "feature" release, followed by "bugfix" release few days later. Like emulating old odd/even versions - development/stable model. Graph proved my guts were wrong.
Few outliers:
- v12 (40 days) - fstab, crypttab and similar handled in C; lots of other stuff
- v16 (44 days) - mostly bugfixes
- v38 (91 days) - journal
- v183 (70 days) - udev merge
- v197 (48 days) - OnCalendar= in timer units; bootchart merge
- v198 (59 days) - drop-in directories for unit customization
Recently I had a gut feeling that the releases oscillate between longer "feature" release, followed by "bugfix" release few days later. Like emulating old odd/even versions - development/stable model. Graph proved my guts were wrong.
Few outliers:
- v12 (40 days) - fstab, crypttab and similar handled in C; lots of other stuff
- v16 (44 days) - mostly bugfixes
- v38 (91 days) - journal
- v183 (70 days) - udev merge
- v197 (48 days) - OnCalendar= in timer units; bootchart merge
- v198 (59 days) - drop-in directories for unit customization
Shared with: Public, systemd
Reshared by: systemd, Jóhann B. Guðmundsson
Jóhann B. Guðmundsson - 2013-03-29T11:43:47+0000
Throwing new release over the wall every 2 1/2 weeks might be a bit too fast I personally would like us to sync it ( along with couple of other coreOS components ) with the kernel release cycle ;)
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