On Jan 9, 2008 1:45 PM, Hans de Goede <j.w.r.degoede@xxxxxx> wrote: > Does this mean that Fedora should not have shipped the new stack? No it > doesn't! Getting code out there early into many hands for testing is a good thing. > > What IMHO we should have done is build both the new and the oldstack, which is > possible on the kernel side, and modify our patches to userspace to support the > juju stack, so that the userspace libs can work with either one. On top of this > we should then have written a small gui utility for easy switching. Supporting two versions of anything, especially on the same system is much harder than it looks. The people in charge have to make sure that the old version still works, even if it's unmaintained upstream, the new version works somewhat, so it doesn't completely suck, the userspace stack surrounding kernel bits has to work equally as well, so that the transition is smooth, the interoperability between the new/old components and the rest of the system is equal, etc... Then they have to worry about security advisories on both components, managing two packages where there could be one, propagating static materials twice, like documentation and configuration details, writing documentation on how to switch back and forth for those butterflies that are interested in making things work well, etc... All in all, it takes alot more manpower than what's available right now. -Yaakov -- fedora-devel-list mailing list fedora-devel-list@xxxxxxxxxx https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-devel-list