home user composed on 2024-04-11 19:49 (UTC-0600):

> What does the -100 vs. -200 signify?

From observation, not reading any doc:

A fresh Fedora release gets -300, moving the prior release to -200, and the 
prior
to prior release to -100. After the prior-prior's support ends, there is only
current, prior, and rawhide. At some later point, next release gets branched 
from
Rawhide. I think it's at or before branching that prior gets switched from -200 
to
-100, and current gets switched from -300 to -200. So, latest/current, with next
imminent, is F39 is -200 and F38 is -100, with F40 about to be released with 
-300.

Does it actually have any more meaning? I haven't been able to spot anything 
more
than at upgrade time, allowing the same version of kernel to be installed twice,
first within the old release, then again from upgrading to the new release.
-- 
Evolution as taught in public schools is, like religion,
        based on faith, not based on science.

 Team OS/2 ** Reg. Linux User #211409 ** a11y rocks!

Felix Miata
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