My personal preference would be for ${name}-${version}.tar.bz2 as well, but 2nd place would be ${name}-stable-${version}.tar.bz2. On Wed, Nov 14, 2012 at 3:47 PM, Tren Blackburn <tren@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > On Wed, Nov 14, 2012 at 3:40 PM, Jimmy Tang <jtang@xxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: >> >> On 14 Nov 2012, at 16:14, Sage Weil wrote: >> >>> >>> Appending the codename to the version string is something we did with >>> argonaut (0.48argonaut) just to make it obvious to users which stable >>> version they are on. >>> >>> How do people feel about that? Is it worthwhile? Useless? Ugly? >>> >>> We can certainly skip it for 0.55 bobtail… >> >> Just throwing in some thoughts, but how about a scheme like ${name}-stable-${version}.tar.bz2 and have the corresponding directory structure inside and just ditch code names in the tar ball filename? It doesn't look as nice with out a codename, but it makes it absolutely clear to new users that it is a stable release. >> > Personally, I'd prefer standard naming of ${name}-${version}.tar.bz2. > You make it clear on your site which version is the LTS release, and > which are the developer releases. > > t. -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe ceph-devel" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html