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Date:      Thu, 11 Jan 2001 10:49:35 -0500
From:      Tim McMillen <timcm@umich.edu>
To:        Pete French <pfrench@firstcallgroup.co.uk>, jwpauler@jwpages.com, tom@uniserve.com
Cc:        freebsd-stable@FreeBSD.ORG
Subject:   Re: Next release
Message-ID:  <0101111049350E.00498@tim.elnsng1.mi.home.com>
In-Reply-To: <E14GftO-0004lE-00@dilbert.fcg.co.uk>
References:  <E14GftO-0004lE-00@dilbert.fcg.co.uk>

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On Thursday January 11, 2001 06:27, Pete French wrote:
> >   To anyone using cvsup, releases are growing increasingly
> > meaningless.
>
> O.K., I am slightly confused here - I thought that tracking 4.2
> stable just gives me bug fixes to 4.2, 

I personally would like something like that, but that is not how it 
works.

> yet I am starting to get the
> impression that if I continue cvsupping regularly I will actually end
> up with 4.3 by the time it is released ? 

Yes, the stable branch is continuously improved with bug fixes and new 
features.  Every four months (now that I know that number :) or so a 
release is made from from the stable branch.

> I was under the impression
> that tracking -stable did not attempt to add any new features, but
> instead simplt added bug fixes to the last release...
>
> Anybody point me in the direction of a concise explanation at all ?

Chapter 19 of the handbook gives it.  But section 19.2.2.2 seems to 
imply it is just a bug fix branch, but since new features sometimes 
bring bugs, that would seem misleading to me.  Anyone more enlightened 
care to shed light on that?

						Tim


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