Hi Michael,
it's long overdue: thanks for your work on stable releases!
On 03/03/2017 10:56 AM, Michael Stefaniuc wrote:
On 03/02/2017 07:50 PM, Nathan Schulte wrote:
- Current supported distribution versions won't upgrade from 1.8.x to
2.0. They will (hopefully) do the switch in their next version.
Indeed Wine 2.0 was deemed as too late for the main Wine packages in Debian Stretch (currently in freeze). So I'm trying to get 1.8.7 in there, for now I uploaded it to experimental.
If this works, I'd also try to get Wine stable updates in Debian stable updates in the future. However this would first happen with maybe Wine 4.0.x for Debian Buster (2019).
- Ubuntu 16.10 LTS came out with Wine 1.6.2 even though 1.8.3 was out
already. So I wouldn't wonder if they'll use 1.8.7 in their next LTS... I don't particularly care about Ubuntu but that's how most of our new users make their first contact with Wine.
LTS was 16.04, not 16.10. AIUI 16.04 was released with 1.6.2 because the old Ubuntu maintainer(s) stopped working on Wine.
Then several people started to work on bringing the Debian packages to Ubuntu. I'm working closely with them, and since 16.10 we succeeded in having the up to date Debian packages in Ubuntu. Work is also going on to get older versions updated, but progress is slow there.
17.04 will most probably use 1.8.7 (currently 1.8.6), even if they have to pick it from Debian experimental, not Debian testing/unstable. Eventually we might even get 2.0 there, but with Debian being in freeze that's not trivial - so thanks again for 1.8.7.
- It is very easy for me to do an old stable release after the new
stable was cut. With the code freeze prior to a new stable release only small bug fixes and most importantly regression fixes go in. So there is a high density of good commits to cherry pick for the old stable.
This makes me a lot more comfortable in pushing 1.8.7 now :)
Currently the bug list for target_milestone=1.8.x is empty.[1] Would you tag any regression in that way (even for the now "finished" 1.8.x series), or what's the best way for me to learn about regressions in the stable releases?
Do you plan to roughly stick with the bi-monthly release schedule? So I'd roughly assume a 2.0.1 in April?
Greets! jre
[1]: https://bugs.winehq.org/buglist.cgi?target_milestone=1.8.x