>>> The reason for not having mass rebuild during F25 development cycle is
>>> very tight schedule for F25 and we would like to avoid slips in F25 as
>>> much as possible. That is the main motivation here.
>> In other words sacrificing quality for marketing reasons - Utterly poor :(
>>
>
> It's not sacrificing quality. Mass rebuilds require a great deal of 
> engineering
> coordination. We're requesting that such coordination happens in the F26
> development cycle instead, so we don't end up having another long cycle.
>
> There is strong engineering value in having two releases per year: release
> early, release often. There are many projects that develop through Fedora that
> get thrown into disarray when our cycle gets too far out of whack (prominent
> examples being GNOME and glibc). So given that we needed to extend the F24
> timeframe early on (and also had a couple slips), FESCo agreed to shorten F25 
> in
> response so that we can still deliver the autumn releases of key projects
> (without having to re-consider the updates policy like we did for GNOME
> 3.14->3.16 during the "Year Almost Without Fedora").
>
> All of the major stakeholders that usually trigger a mass rebuild (GCC, glibc,
> etc.) have been notified directly and are on board with this. This 
> announcement
> was to ensure that no one was left surprised by this in case we missed telling
> anyone directly.

Really? The email from Florian on this thread 30 mins prior to this
one conflicts with that from a glibc PoV and given they're part of the
toolchain team and they didn't know does the rest of the toolchain
team agree?

Peter
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