On 18-Dec-08, at 3:42 AM, Brett Porter wrote:
Hi,
I did what seems like my bi-annual review of all the unscheduled
issues today, reviewing and scheduling where appropriate. There's 10
left with open questions, and I'm making an early new years
resolution to keep on top of new reports :)
Jason, Shane - as instructed I put all the reported regressions with
trunk into 3.0-alpha-3. I expect some of these are already fixed so
it would be worth a run through them before releasing alpha-1 to see
if some can be closed out.
If they have an IT and they work close them. But I don't think we can
close the issues without an IT which is why I've honestly not gone
after them even though I know some of them work from observation.
Benjamin might have some hiding out somewhere.
However, the main purpose was to identify reported regressions in
2.1.0-M1, of which we have a couple. So 2.1.0-M2 is down to about 11
issues including some patches to review. I updated the roadmap,
moving Doxia to M3 as they round out the 1.1 release. I also moved
the MNG-624 out to 2.2 (or beyond) while Ralph reviews his
implementation.
Given enough time to wrap these up, I'd like to shoot for an M2
release by the end of the year. M3 and M4 could follow quickly since
the work is already done on branches.
I think here again you need to defer to the massive amount of work
John did for the release. As far as I'm concerned that's his call as
he's the defacto release manager. If he wants to hand it off that's
fine.
Cheers,
Brett
--
Brett Porter
[email protected]
http://blogs.exist.com/bporter/
Thanks,
Jason
----------------------------------------------------------
Jason van Zyl
Founder, Apache Maven
jason at sonatype dot com
----------------------------------------------------------
You are never dedicated to something you have complete confidence in.
No one is fanatically shouting that the sun is going to rise tomorrow.
They know it is going to rise tomorrow. When people are fanatically
dedicated to political or religious faiths or any other kind of
dogmas or goals, it's always because these dogmas or
goals are in doubt.
-- Robert Pirzig, Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance
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