On Sat, 2022-02-05 at 21:06 -0500, Mike Frysinger wrote:
On 05 Feb 2022 15:15, Alex Ameen wrote:
This is a good question. I plan on making a new release this month.
When I first adopted the project I ambitiously thought I'd manage to
create a new release after about a month; but the truth is when I
started doing a deep dive into the internals there was a lot of history
and complexity for me to unpack. Things that are easy to overlook like
how change-logs get generated, quirks in the testing framework, and
tracing down disparate areas to align documentation took quite a while
to navigate.
The good news is that I think I've got the confidence to push a release
soon. One area that I was reading up on this weekend was whether the
"alpha"/private releases of `libtool' might be appropriate, or whether I
should just push a release immediately. I'll admit I am leaning towards
just making a release to avoid the entire alpha process for the time being.
i wouldn't sweat it too much. the next release of libtool will be 2.6, and
you can note its state in the announcement/NEWS. distros will give it a run
to find regressions, and as fixes are merged, just do 2.6.1, 2.6.2, etc...
I'd like to second that. Getting a release out would be great even if it isn't
perfect, then go from there.
I know there are some Yocto Project patches for issues we've collected from
across the embedded ecosystem over the last few years that I rebased and posted
in the hope they could be merged. I'd rather we got to those in due course and
had a release though! :)
Cheers,
Richard