On 26/03/2016 13:32, Reindl Harald wrote:
Am 26.03.2016 um 04:13 schrieb Noel Butler:
On 25/03/2016 19:52, Graham Leggett wrote:
On 23 Mar 2016, at 1:58 PM, Noel Butler
wrote:
as stated previously, this shit will happen when certain people push
with a release often mentality
AFAIK there is
Am 26.03.2016 um 04:13 schrieb Noel Butler:
On 25/03/2016 19:52, Graham Leggett wrote:
On 23 Mar 2016, at 1:58 PM, Noel Butler wrote:
as stated previously, this shit will happen when certain people push
with a release often mentality
AFAIK there is *ZERO* critical exploit bugs to be patched
On 25/03/2016 19:52, Graham Leggett wrote:
On 23 Mar 2016, at 1:58 PM, Noel Butler wrote:
as stated previously, this shit will happen when certain people push
with a release often mentality
AFAIK there is *ZERO* critical exploit bugs to be patched by any
pending release, so lets get house i
Steffen, thanks for testing and giving the numbers. I hope that 1.4.5 is even a
bit better than 1.4.4.
> Am 25.03.2016 um 11:11 schrieb Steffen :
>
> Build today Branches 2.4.x : mod_http2 (v1.4.5, nghttp2 1.8.0),
> initializing...
>
> The statistics graphs Total Accesses are fine again, no
Build today Branches 2.4.x : mod_http2 (v1.4.5, nghttp2 1.8.0),
initializing...
The statistics graphs Total Accesses are fine again, no regression
over 2.4.18 anymore.
Btw.
Sofar that the memory footprint with 1.4.4 was far better over 1.2.8.
I keep an eye on 1.4.5
Mod_http2 1.4.4 (2.4.19
On 23 Mar 2016, at 1:58 PM, Noel Butler wrote:
> as stated previously, this shit will happen when certain people push with a
> release often mentality
>
> AFAIK there is *ZERO* critical exploit bugs to be patched by any pending
> release, so lets get house in order S T A B L E , then worry ab
On 23/03/2016 22:27, Jim Jagielski wrote:
I see your point and have no intent or desire to flame.
Release Often is hardly a Bad Thing, at least IMHO. When the
time is right for a release, then we release. It seemed a
good time, again IMHO.
My opinion that "this shit will happen" when, despite