Am Tue, May 14, 2024 at 11:41:26AM +0200 schrieb Ludovic Courtès:
> As discussed at the 2023 Guix Days (!), we could follow a model similar
> to that of NixOS: form a release team (~4 people) dedicated to keeping
> track of issues in particular wrt. the installer, and committed to
> publishing a
Christina O'Donnell writes:
> On 08/05/2024 14:01, Christopher Baines wrote:
>> I think it would be nice to have a new release, and indeed release more
>> often, I think the way to get there is for less things to be broken
>> between releases, such that releasing takes less effort in terms of
>>
Hi,
On 08/05/2024 14:01, Christopher Baines wrote:
I think it would be nice to have a new release, and indeed release more
often, I think the way to get there is for less things to be broken
between releases, such that releasing takes less effort in terms of
testing and fixing things.
To give
Hi Christopher,
Christopher Baines skribis:
> While releases will still require bursts of effort, I think we need a
> more sustainable approach to actually achieve more frequent releases.
I think this is largely an organizational problem.
As discussed at the 2023 Guix Days (!), we could
Simon Tournier writes:
> Here or there, we have bugs as:
>
> https://issues.guix.gnu.org/70659
> https://issues.guix.gnu.org/70726
>
> And our answer looks like:
>
> > Additionally, I strongly advise upgrading guix-daemon, as noted in
> the
> > bug report above.
>
>
Re,
On lun., 06 mai 2024 at 13:12, Simon Tournier wrote:
> Although these days I do not have much free time, let make a new release
> as soon as possible. WDYT?
>
> Who’s in?
Well, the patch review sessions could be helpful. Maybe we could run
some online hackathons. IMHO, having a schedule
Hi all,
Here or there, we have bugs as:
https://issues.guix.gnu.org/70659
https://issues.guix.gnu.org/70726
And our answer looks like:
> Additionally, I strongly advise upgrading guix-daemon, as noted in the
> bug report above.
Well, the bugs appear because the user is