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Date:      Tue, 17 Jan 2012 19:20:15 -0800
From:      Julian Elischer <julian@freebsd.org>
To:        Devin Teske <devin.teske@fisglobal.com>
Cc:        "<freebsd-hackers@freebsd.org>" <freebsd-hackers@freebsd.org>, "Matthew D. Fuller" <fullermd@over-yonder.net>
Subject:   Re: * Re: FreeBSD has serious problems with focus, longevity, and lifecycle
Message-ID:  <4F163A6F.8020804@freebsd.org>
In-Reply-To: <F515379F-12D1-4D06-A42D-089FB004C328@fisglobal.com>
References:  <alpine.BSF.2.00.1112211415580.19710@kozubik.com> <jf3mps$is3$1@dough.gmane.org> <CAFHbX1%2Bi3JwCCBmqtOsW6m74VpDBSAmBOt7CPcCGAPCO2DBDkA@mail.gmail.com> <CAF-QHFV8oj=ipwcsVo3e3P3kgGBPr%2Bz1gRzn3D3PT%2Bc0pHJtcQ@mail.gmail.com> <4F15C48F.7020302@barafranca.com> <20120117224123.GC509@over-yonder.net> <4F16331E.4000702@freebsd.org> <20120118030532.GG509@over-yonder.net> <F515379F-12D1-4D06-A42D-089FB004C328@fisglobal.com>

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On 1/17/12 7:12 PM, Devin Teske wrote:
>
> On Jan 17, 2012, at 7:05 PM, "Matthew D. Fuller"<fullermd@over-yonder.net>  wrote:
>
>> On Tue, Jan 17, 2012 at 06:49:02PM -0800 I heard the voice of
>> Julian Elischer, and lo! it spake thus:
>>> 5 was not out on a limb for so long because it was a clusterfun, it
>>> was out there because it was a rework of how almost everything in
>>> the kernel worked.
>> I'm not saying it was a cluster because it was a huge amount of very
>> deep work; it's because that huge amount of very deep work completely
>> gated our next release.  Now, sure, changing external circumstances
>> caught us with our pants down, and the tools we were using (like CVS)
>> made it hard to do anything else.  But that just means there were
>> good reasons why it happened; doesn't make it less clusterfull   :)
>>
>>
>> The two circumstances (giant rework, and long period between major
>> releases) are duals of each other.  If we chop off giant piles of
>> stuff to do for FreeBSD-next, it's going to take a very long time.
>> And if we instead just set very long times (Jan 2017 for 10?!
>> Insanity!) for -next, we're going to end up with giant reworks and
>> huge differences.
>>
>> And _both_ faces are very bad.  The one means we wait forever for any
>> new work, and the other means that it takes enormous amounts of work
>> as a user to transistion across the barrier.
>>
the trouble with 5 was that it had to be all-or-nothing.

there is no such thing as a partly SMP system. (well, not one that 
you'd want to run).

the size of the "giant pile of stuff" was not of our choosing.

> We could adopt a cycle similar to the Linux Kernel...
>
> Odd numbered releases are "experimental" while even numbered releases are "stable"
>
> (ducks for flying fruit)
>
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