To expand a bit on what Claus already explained, the release process for java projects usually involves: 1. building and staging the release candidate in the asf maven repository 2. there is a 72+hr window in which developers test and vote on the release 3. if the release passes the result of the vote is announced and the staged release is made public. Minutes later it will be available in Maven Central 4. the version is marked as released in jira 5. The source and binary artifacts are copied from the maven repository to the asf distro area 6. from the distro area asf mirrors get sync'ed up usually twice a day 7. once the mirrors are updated we can update the cwiki pages (download, release notes and all) with links pointing to the mirrors 8. the site gets updated and release announced.
That's why the public announcement lags by 1-2 days. In this case it took a bit longer, because we're also moving to the new release mirroring mechanism that is in use since Nov last year. Another reason is that this week some of us are the ApacheCon conference in Denver and we're too busy having fun :). On the 5.10.0 release point, the goal is to do it asap, there are some 20 issues still to be fixed. Normally that should not take more than 2-3 weeks. Hadrian On Monday 07 April 2014 03:35:18 Claus Ibsen wrote: > You can download AMQ 5.9.1 from maven central which was just released. > > It will be announced later when its been synced to the Apache mirror > infrastructure, ready for download there as well. > > Usually a release is available on maven central sooner than Apache infra. > > > 5.10 will come out later when its ready. > > On Mon, Apr 7, 2014 at 9:26 AM, khandelwalanuj > > <[email protected]> wrote: > > Hey, please respond !! > > > > > > > > -- > > View this message in context: > > http://activemq.2283324.n4.nabble.com/ActiveMQ-5-10-release-date-tp467907 > >1p4680108.html Sent from the ActiveMQ - Dev mailing list archive at > > Nabble.com. >
