Axel Thimm wrote: > There was a suggestion (Nov 2003?) to "rename" RHL7.3 etc. to > FC0.7.3 etc. in order to get the disttag issues straightened out > (the natural disttag "rh9" is not rpm-less than "fc1"). I figured something as such, but didn't want to ass-u-me anything. I always wondered why they they just didn't call it Fedora Core 10, leaving a "hint" that it was related, without the trademark issues. So makes you wonder if it would have not been better after all with the disttag issues! > If I am not wrong fedora.us is using a similar scheme with stripped > away distids, i.e. they don't use fc0.7.3 but plain 0.7.3 in the > versioning. Yeah, I thought I saw something somewhere in the SRPMS (or am I talking out of my ass about something else?). > FWIW I would very much welcome a common versioning scheme for RHL > & FC that could look like > fc0.7.3 < fc0.8.0 < fc0.9 < fc1 < fc2 < fc2.90 etc > The confusion will be high, and unless all packaging parties use > the same semantics users will be lost. Yeah, that's that problem. How far do you go? Do you just use my suggestion, only changing the "legacy" "redhat- release" package? Or do we go so far to re-spin the whole, still legacy-supported 0.7.3 and 9 releases with lots of various trademark modifications, although we leave some of the 7.3/9 references for compatibility? At > The discussion in the past has shown very low to none interest > by RH, and N^2 disttag suggestions from N 3rd parties, so there > is low chance of anything happening. That's sad. I _am_ understanding of what Red Hat decided to do, and their "hands are tied" for trademark reasons which is why most of the confusion exists. But they _could_ have at least thought of these things _beforehand_. Oh well, I guess the best thing we can do is just use the nomenclature everywhere. When I reference _any_ release now, I list it as a "Fedora Core" release, typically with a "Lx.x" in front of it, and then an optional tag of either "[current]," "[legacy]" or "[retired]". E.g., Fedora Core L6.2 [retired] Fedora Core L7.2 [retired] Fedora Core L7.3 [legacy] Fedora Core L8 [retired] Fedora Core L9 [legacy] Fedora Core 1 [current] Fedora Core 2 [current] I then replace the "L" with "0." in any formal files/versions. -- Bryan P.S. Is Fedora Core 1 becoming "legacy" anytime soon? We're almost to 1 year now. -- Linux Enthusiasts call me anti-Linux. Windows Enthusisats call me anti-Microsoft. They both must be correct because I have over a decade of experience with both in mission critical environments, resulting in a bigotry dedicated to mitigating risk and focusing on technologies ... not products or vendors -------------------------------------------------- Bryan J. Smith, E.I. b.j.smith at ieee.org -- fedora-legacy-list@xxxxxxxxxx http://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-legacy-list