Re: From 2.4 to 2.6 to 2.7?

From: Byron Stanoszek
Date: Tue Jul 15 2008 - 10:20:13 EST


On Mon, 14 Jul 2008, Linus Torvalds wrote:

I think the time-based releases (ie the "2 weeks of merge window until -rc1,
followed by roughly two months of stabilization") has been so successful that
I'd prefer to skip the version numbering model too. We don't do releases
based on "features" any more, so why should we do version _numbering_ based
on "features"?

For example, I don't see any individual feature that would merit a jump
from 2.x to 3.x or even from 2.6.x to 2.8.x. So maybe those version jumps
should be done by a time-based model too - matching how we actually do
releases anyway.

So if the version were to be date-based, instead of releasing 2.6.26,
maybe we could have 2008.7 instead. Or just increment the major version
every decade, the middle version every year, and the minor version every
time we make a release. Whatever.

Well, we just haven't had anything big enough to merit an increase in the
minor number lately. I nominate the removal of the BKL as one such feature,
based on the sheer work required and how many modules you'll need to touch to
do so. In fact, it would be the natural conclusion to a 2.x series that
highlighted SMP as its primary new feature.

But it's hard now to predict future milestones, or when an overall paradigm
shift might happen. In those cases you'll want to give Linux a bright new
announcement to the world, instead of it being "just another standard year of
kernel development".

Remember, you used to have versions called 1.3.100 before -- and they seemed
perfectly normal back then. I personally like how we're still on 2.y.z numbers
compared to all of the other OSes (Solaris 11, HP-UX 11)...it makes Linux still
feel young, showing how much better it can get ;-)

So I vote for releasing by "features" still, and keep the current numbering
scheme. Who knows when the next big idea will pop up that's worthy of 3.0.0.

-Byron

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