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Date:      Sun, 6 Oct 2002 15:02:06 +0400 (MSD)
From:      Dmitry Morozovsky <marck@rinet.ru>
To:        Adam Weinberger <adam@vectors.cx>
Cc:        Bart Smit <bit@signature.nl>, <freebsd-stable@FreeBSD.ORG>
Subject:   Re: versioning
Message-ID:  <20021006145616.J66882-100000@woozle.rinet.ru>
In-Reply-To: <20021006084335.GL45363@vectors.cx>

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On Sun, 6 Oct 2002, Adam Weinberger wrote:

AW> you can likely deduce some answers from:
AW> http://www.freebsd.org/releases/4.7R/schedule.html
AW>
AW> 4.7-PRERELEASE is a tag marking what the 4.7 release will be all about.
AW> then, 4.7-RC, 4.7-RC2, 4.7-RC3 (RC = release candidate) are snapshots
AW> that grow closer and closer to what the RE team feels comfortable
AW> calling 4.7-RELEASE.

Yeah, this is true, except the following...

AW> so, as you track RELENG_4, you will obtain each tag point sequentially.
AW> if you cvsup your sources every day, you will know when RC2 is available
AW> because "uname -a" will show 4.7-RC2.

Which is not. uname of the system is determined by /usr/src/sys/conf/newvers.h;
-RC[n] are never been CVS tags, they are specifically set on machines which
build release candidates.

Summarizing: if you follow sources via cvs/cvsup/other way, you'd never got
-RCn. You got, for last month, 4.6-STABLE, then 4.7-PRERELEASE, then 4.7-RC
(without numbers), then, finally, 4.7-STABLE. However, you'd *never* got
4.7-RELEASE, because this specific tag will be set on a security branch named
RELENG_4_7 (which is created shortly before actual release).


Sincerely,
D.Marck                                   [DM5020, DM268-RIPE, DM3-RIPN]
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*** Dmitry Morozovsky --- D.Marck --- Wild Woozle --- marck@rinet.ru ***
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