On Sun, Oct 28, 2001 at 11:04:20AM +0100, Thomas Roessler wrote:
: 
: On 2001-10-28 04:48:52 -0500, Russell Hoover wrote:
: 
: >Would someone from the mutt developer community mind giving a 
: >heads-up as to the philosophy or current thinking about this 
: >situation?
: 
: 1.3.23 is "pretty stable" now - which is why 1.3-branch 
: announcements come on mutt-users, and why the 1.3 tar balls are not 
: in the devel/ subdirectory.
[...] 
: In fact, you could legitimately say that there is currently no true 
: unstable branch - and that's basically because releasing a beta 
: version (and, even more so) releasing a new stable version will 
: inevitably uncover those bugs which don't come up with the usage 
: patterns of developers (or the bold hearts doing beta tests).

I wonder if Russell is thinking of something more akin to the FreeBSD
development cycle where there are two branches: FreeBSD-CURRENT and
FreeBSD-STABLE.  FreeBSD-CURRENT is basically bleeding-edge development
where all the wacky new stuff is started.  FreeBSD-STABLE is slow-paced
development, with more bug fixes and newer features that's gone through
some testing in FreeBSD-CURRENT.  The releases are created from the
FreeBSD-STABLE branch around 3-4 times a year.  However, I don't know if
Mutt or the Mutt community is large enough to warrant this system.
Waiting for such a long time between releases usually means that there's
too much work and too few developers, or the next release is a huge
radical departure from the previous release (features, code base, etc.).


-- 
Eugene Lee
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

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