Hi, On Sat, 04 Jun 2011 10:21:00 -0300, David Bremner <bremner@unb.ca> wrote: > Overall I think Carl's time based release proposal is a reasonable > plan. I think one problem we've been having is that we seem to have lost > track of > > # Releases of notmuch have a two-digit version (0.1, 0.2, etc.). We > # increment the second digit for each release and increment the first > # digit when we reach particularly major milestones of usability. > > In short, I think we are make too big of a deal out of releases. Looking > at the log between 0.5 and now, there are features enough to justify > several minor releases. Or even major ! Frankly, this project has grew up quite quickly and features are implemented at a really good rythm. The sole problem is that it is really hard to see how far we are from a release and what exactly has been cooked up since latest release (from my point of view). > On Fri, 03 Jun 2011 15:56:42 -0700, Carl Worth <cworth@cworth.org> wrote: > > > > Frankly, I wouldn't mind doing strict time-based releases with something > > like the following: > > > > * We schedule a release period (once per month?) > > I think every two months might be a bit more comfortable, but then > again, 1 month would keep us from "making a big deal out of releases." Best before choosing the frequency is probably to try doing this a few times and be comfortable with the process. If after a few releases -i.e. say 3- the more we can do is release every trimester so do it. The process should be simple (and will be I guess) and the most difficult part is probably to document every aspect of every changes in the NEWS file (with eventually a good shaped manual ;)). > > * We schedule a "safety period" before the release (one week?) > > * At the beginning of the safety period, package up the head > > of the notmuch tree and upload to Debian experimental and > > anywhere else similar. > > Sure. I don't mind doing that part, at least for Debian. I'm going to > try to do at roughly weekly uploads to Debian experimental. Hopefully > this will get some critical mass of users testing those versions. I know it is a bit off topic here but just a question: how will you deal with dependencies ? I mean, when we need GMime vX.Y.Z and Debian has already vX.V.W ? /Xavier