On Fri, 17 Oct 2008, david@xxxxxxx wrote:
Surely some scripts will start to break as soon as the third number getswe've had three digit numbers in the third position before (2.3 and 2.5
three digits.
went well past three digits IIRC)
Did we? I only recall 2.5.7[something] and 2.3.5[something] (plus special
2.3.99 release).
Actually, I thought we could continue to use a w.x.y.z numberingif you want the part of the version number to increment based on the year,
scheme, but in such a way that:
w = ($year - 2000) / 10 + 2 (so that we start from 2)
x = $year % 10
y = (number of major release in $year)
z = (number of stable version for major release w.x.y)
Then, the first major release in 2009 would be 2.9.1 and its first
-stable "child" would become 2.9.1.1. In turn, the first major
release in 2010 could be 3.0.1 and so on.
just make it the year and don't complicate things.
In addition to that, having the kernel version dependent on year doesn't
really seem to make much sense to me. Simply said, I don't see any
relation of kernel source code contents to the current date in whatever
calendar system.
And 2.x+1.y-rcZ+1 immediately following 2.x.y-rcZ really hurts my eyes :)