On Fri, Feb 26, 2010 at 08:45:11PM -0700, Orion Poplawski wrote: > >> > > Those people should use a more conservative distribution. Try CentOS maybe. > > Frequent updates are an integral part of the Fedora experience. > > > There is plenty of room for something in between your vision of Fedora > and CentOS. I strongly disagree that frequent updates are an integral > part of the Fedora experience. I don't think that the point here is the stability of the distribution. I am very in favor of a stable distro, and on that point, I think that I side more with you than with Kevin K. But, in my opinion, having a policy that renders pushing to stable harder is not a good move, at least for many packages, since for those packages there is no real test done in updates-testing, and they are specialized packages so that there little chance of attracting more testers. Having such a policy for critical packages or packages with a large user base, and so a large number of testers, why not, but I don't think that it should be a general policy. At least I know that for the packages I maintained (and you now maintain a fair share of those packages ;-), such a policy would have been very unproductive. In fact, I think that I would be in favor of selecting a set of important packages that would have specific procedures for update, but not for all fedora packages. Good candidates would be rpm, kernel, yum, hal, X, gnome libraries, gtk, kde libraries for the packages that are critical. openoffice, firefox, the gnome and kde desktops, fluxbox would certainly qualify as huge userbase software that may also have more requirements on updates testing since they are likely to attract users. But definitly not the packages with low userbase (for example, most of the scientific related packages, dockapps, xdm...). -- Pat -- devel mailing list devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx https://admin.fedoraproject.org/mailman/listinfo/devel