Trying to make this idea a little more concrete. Here's two suggestions for how it might work. These are strawman ideas -- please provide alternates, poke holes, etc. And particularly from a QA and rel-eng point of view. Both of these are not taking modularity into account in any way; it's "how we could do this with our current distro-building process". Option 1: Big batched update 1. Release F26 according to schedule https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Releases/26/Schedule 2. At the beginning of October, stop pushing non-security updates from updates-testing to updates 3. Bigger updates (desktop environment refreshes, etc.) allowed into updates-testing at this time. 4. Mid-October, freeze exceptions for getting into updates-testing even. 5. Test all of that together in Some Handwavy Way for serious problems and regressions. 6. Once all good, push from updates-testing to updates at end of October or beginning of November. Option 2: Branching! 1. Release F26 according to schedule. 2. July/August: branch F26.1 from F26 (not rawhide) 3. Updates to F26 also go into F26.1 (magic happens here?) 4. No Alpha, but do "Beta" freeze and validation as normal for release. 5. And same for F26.1 final 6. And sometime in October/November, release that (but without big press push). 7. GNOME Software presents F26.1 as upgrade option 8. F26 continues in parallel through December 9. In January, update added to F26 which activates the F26.1 repo. 10. And also in January updates stop going to F26. Some of this idea, by the way, is reminiscent of Spot's suggestions at FUDCon Lawrence in 2013. This is not completely coincidence - I always liked those ideas! -- Matthew Miller <mattdm@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> Fedora Project Leader _______________________________________________ devel mailing list -- devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe send an email to devel-leave@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx