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I don't think any open-source project should stick to a release schedule, but rather publish an update whenever something major/minor needs to change. For patches I think it should / could be up to the end-user to download and compile it if they really want it? |
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Wish we had gone forward with this, nothing too strict, maybe a loose monthly release schedule. Currently its been close to a year without any new releases, while there have been loads of commits and issue resolutions merged to master. One such example being #2960, it's there in master since Feb, but its not there in the current release of bat. |
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Hi @keith-hall I hope it's okay to tag you in to this discussion. It's been quite a while since the last bat release and I know that there some features that folks would like to use that have been introduced since the last release. Also I believe some distribution methods are having to maintain backported patches. The poll that started this discussion didn't quite have a majority in favor of any one cadence but an overwhelming majority supported 1–3 months. What do you think about cutting a new release and then beginning regular releases at any cadence between 1 and three months? |
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In your opinion, what would be the ideal release cadence for bat? In other words, how frequently would you like to see releases of bat?
Feel free to motivate your answer, and also to say if you are a bat user, a bat package maintainer, or something else.
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