On Thu, Nov 29, 2018 at 10:57 AM Josh Boyer <jwbo...@fedoraproject.org> wrote:
>
> On Thu, Nov 29, 2018 at 10:22 AM Paul Frields <sticks...@gmail.com> wrote:
> >
> > On Thu, Nov 29, 2018 at 4:47 AM Miroslav Suchý <msu...@redhat.com> wrote:
> > >
> > > Dne 27. 11. 18 v 17:04 Josh Boyer napsal(a):
> > > >> In other words, the "technical debt" we are trying to solve here is
> > > >> not project wide and doesn't justify slowing down the whole project
> > > >> permanently.
> > > > I completely disagree.  Our release process and tooling is built on
> > > > heroism and tech debt.
> > >
> > > People working on release and people working on packages maintenance are 
> > > different group - they are not disjunct, but it
> > > is not the same group.
> > > For example *I* am a maintainer of lots of packages, but the additional 
> > > works because of the fedora release is about one
> > > working day per year - and it is mostly because of fedora-upgrade 
> > > package. Other packages do not need so much work. I am
> > > more affected by upstream releases.
> > >
> > > Do not forget that annual releases will mean that N-1 release will 
> > > implicate 24 months support for packages which will
> > > mean a much more significant impact on us-the maintaners.
>
> I'll echo what Paul says below with a +1, but I wanted to touch on
> this point a bit because it implies an assumption that the maintenance
> model remains the same even if lifecycle options change.  I don't
> think that needs to be the case, nor do I think it would even be good.
>
> Of the large number of packages that you maintain, how many of them
> are critical to freeze at a specific version for a given Fedora
> release?  Possibly some, but I would think across the distribution it
> would not be a huge number.  So if there is no essential need to
> freeze them at a specific version, why would you want to maintain the
> packages *separately* for each release?  That sounds like extra work
> for no benefit.  If we instead take a maintenance approach that you
> maintain package foo and it is built for all releases, then you only
> really need to maintain it in a singular instance.
>
> Today that is something that can be accomplished with modularity, but
> I would suggest that we look at stream branching as a solution even
> for regular packages.  So you wouldn't have fc22-fc32 branches under
> package foo.  You'd have foo/stream-<version> and you could build that
> wherever you'd like.  Couple that with automated CI testing and I
> believe you actually decrease your maintenance burden while increasing
> your quality.
>
> There are many details that would need to be worked out and I don't
> want to trivialize them, but I do want to at least get people thinking
> about it in the long term.  If we are going to improve the way we
> build and deliver our operating system, we shouldn't assume we can do
> that without changing the way we maintain it either.
>

We can change this _today_, actually. fedpkg supports an in-repo
config file to specify distro targets to push whenever running `fedpkg
build`. So you could do a repo with only a master branch and have it
push to all distro targets enabled for the repo at once. This is
probably a useful optimization for the overwhelming majority of
packages held by packagers.

It's just not documented or available as an option for setup when you
file a repo creation request.


-- 
真実はいつも一つ!/ Always, there's only one truth!
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