From: Stefan F. <ste...@we...> - 2011-09-22 16:43:41
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In my understanding the inclusion of new stuff is the defining difference between nightly builds and bug-fix releases to the latest stable release, but opinions might differ here. And I would try for a bug fix release only to apply those changes to the latest stable release which are clear fixes and not new features etc. This is something that the change to git makes much easier to accomplish. Stefan On Thursday, September 22, 2011 06:36:32 pm Michał Bażyński wrote: > I could take on the task of providing nightly builds in between releases > in a public dropbox folder. > I thought a sourceforge site was a better place for it so didn't > volunteer, but if this being served on dropbox and not sourceforge I can > do it. (I am assuming only patches that have bug fixes would be served > publicly, not newly developed stuff). > > as to your change log for the next release why not mention 1830 wabash > is now working? if someone tried playing that and gave up he might be > interested it is now working... > > mike > > On 11-09-22 18:32, Stefan Frey wrote: > > Chris: > > as already stated I like the idea of more frequent builds. However for > > nightly builds I would prefer an automated setup: To my knowledge there > > is no public build server for java projects (e.g. using Hudson/Jenkins) > > yet, but I have never looked actively for something like that. > > > > Publishing a build via Dropbox sounds somehow strange, but maybe the > > right solution for those playing Rails via Dropbox anyway. However I do > > not volunteer to providing such a solution. > > But maybe a more frequent publication of bug-fix releases will be a > > solution, but possibly I should not to give too much promises before I > > really know how difficult it will be to get the built up to Sourceforge. > > > > Stefan > > --------------------------------------------------------------------------- > --- All the data continuously generated in your IT infrastructure contains > a definitive record of customers, application performance, security > threats, fraudulent activity and more. Splunk takes this data and makes > sense of it. Business sense. IT sense. Common sense. > http://p.sf.net/sfu/splunk-d2dcopy1 > _______________________________________________ > Rails-devel mailing list > Rai...@li... > https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/rails-devel |