30 Aug 07:23
Re: [filesystem][xpressive] Hotfix patches available for 1.36.0
Vladimir Prus <vladimir <at> codesourcery.com>
2008-08-30 05:23:19 GMT
2008-08-30 05:23:19 GMT
Eric Niebler wrote: > > Mat Marcus wrote: >> On Fri, Aug 29, 2008 at 1:36 PM, Eric Niebler <eric <at> boostpro.com> wrote: >>> Michael Marcin wrote: >>>> If the fixes are not critical enough to justify making a point release >>>> than they should wait until the next release. >>> So you're against hotfixes. <shrug> I would say, take the hotfix if you are >>> experiencing the problem addressed by the hotfix. Otherwise, wait for the >>> next release. >> >> For some of us the answer is not <shrug>. > > That wasn't my answer. See above. > >> Are hotfixes really the way >> forward? Not to pick on filesystem, threads or xpressive, but hotfixes >> are a bit difficult to manage in a coporate environment. It's hard >> enough to get boost accepted/updated without having to defend against >> people who argue that it's too risky to use boost due to "inadequate >> quality control" e.g. "boost 1.35.0 didn't work out of the box >> (windows thread bugs, filesystem compilation errors, etc.), boost >> 1.36.0 doesn't work out of the box > > 1.36.0 works out of the box. But I get your point. > >> , and there are no dot-releases >> planned". It really helps if there is a perception of stable, high >> quality, official, numbered releases. > > Understood. You want point releases. We don't have the resources right > now. We are busy flushing the bugs out of a new release process that > should give us quarterly releases. This is in response to feedback such > as yours. Beman has said on this list that the issue of point releases > will be reconsidered once we are meeting our quarterly release schedule. > In the mean time, corporate users of Boost have a few options: (1) > ignore hotfixes, (2) pay for support, (3) consider donating the testing > resources we would need to produce point releases. As I've already said, those "hotfixes" presently appear to be *totally untested*. I'd be happy to be proved wrong -- just point me at a tables of test results for 1.36.0 + hotfixes and I'll shut up. But if hotfixes are indeed untested, then I don't understand why creating 1.36.1, which is basically 1.36.0 + hotfixes in a single archive, would require *any testing resources at all*. Can you clarify? - Volodya _______________________________________________ Unsubscribe & other changes: http://lists.boost.org/mailman/listinfo.cgi/boost
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