Re: [HEADS-UP] Quick update to 14.0-RELEASE schedule
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Date: Thu, 16 Nov 2023 21:59:16 UTC
W dniu 16.11.2023 o 12:19, The Doctor pisze: > On Thu, Nov 16, 2023 at 12:07:36AM -0500, Glen Barber wrote: >> And if there is a reason to reissue a release, the update will reflect such. >> >> So to answer your latter question, yes. Unless it needs to be replaced. >> >> Glen >> Sent from my phone. >> Please excuse my brevity and/or typos. >> >>> On Nov 15, 2023, at 11:38 PM, The Doctor <doctor@doctor.nl2k.ab.ca> wrote: >>> >>> ???On Thu, Nov 16, 2023 at 12:30:30AM +0000, Glen Barber wrote: >>>>> On Wed, Nov 15, 2023 at 08:39:39AM -0800, John Baldwin wrote: >>>>> On 11/14/23 8:52 PM, Glen Barber wrote: >>>>>> On Tue, Nov 14, 2023 at 08:10:23PM -0700, The Doctor wrote: >>>>>>> On Wed, Nov 15, 2023 at 02:27:01AM +0000, Glen Barber wrote: >>>>>>>> On Tue, Nov 14, 2023 at 05:15:48PM -0700, The Doctor wrote: >>>>>>>>> On Tue, Nov 14, 2023 at 08:36:54PM +0000, Glen Barber wrote: >>>>>>>>>> We are still waiting for a few (non-critical) things to complete before >>>>>>>>>> the announcement of 14.0-RELEASE will be ready. >>>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>>> It should only be another day or so before these things complete. >>>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>>> Thank you for your understanding. >>>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> I always just installed my copy. >>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> Ok. I do not know what exactly is your point, but releases are never >>>>>>>> official until there is a PGP-signed email sent. The email is intended >>>>>>>> for the general public of consumers of official releases, not "yeah, >>>>>>>> but"s. >>>>>>>> >>>>>>> Howver if you do a freebsd-update upgrade, you can upgrade. >>>>>>> >>>>>>> Is that suppose to happen? >>>>>>> >>>>>> That does not say that the freebsd-update bits will not change *until* >>>>>> the official release announcement has been sent. >>>>>> >>>>>> In my past 15 years involved in the Project, I think we have been very >>>>>> clear on that. >>>>>> >>>>>> A RELEASE IS NOT FINAL UNTIL THE PGP-SIGNED ANNOUNCEMENT IS SENT. >>>>>> >>>>>> I mean, c'mon, dude. >>>>>> >>>>>> We really, seriously, for all intents and purposes, cannot be any more >>>>>> clear than that. >>>>>> >>>>>> So, yes, *IF* an update necessitates a new freebsd-update build, what >>>>>> you are running is *NOT* official. >>>>>> >>>>>> For at least 15 years, we have all said the same entire thing. >>>>> Yes, but, if at this point we had to rebuild, it would have to be 14.0.1 >>>>> or something (which we have done a few times in the past). It would be >>>>> too confusing otherwise once the bits are built and published (where >>>>> published means "uploaded to our CDN"). It is the 14.0 release bits, >>>>> the only question is if for some reason we had a dire emergency that >>>>> meant we had to pull it at the last minute and publish different bits >>>>> (under a different release name). >>>>> >>>>> Realistically, once the bits are available, we can't prevent people from >>>>> using them, it's just at their own risk to do so until the project says >>>>> "yes, we believe these are good". Granted, they are under the same risk >>>>> if they are still running the last RC. The best way to minimize that >>>>> risk going forward is to add more automation of testing/CI to go along >>>>> with the process of building release bits so that the build artifacts >>>>> from the release build run through CI and are only published if the CI >>>>> is green as that would give us greater confidence of "we believe these >>>>> are good" before they are uploaded for publishing. >>>>> >>>> You are correct on all points. If there were a need to re-roll 14.0, it >>>> would indeed necessitate a release/14.0.1 tag. Note, release/14.0.0 has >>>> not yet been tagged, and I find it extremely unlikely that it will be >>>> necessary to rebuild from a release/14.0.1 tag. >>>> >>>> I also agree we cannot prevent people from downloading the images, >>>> installers, whatever before the announcement. That is the lovely race >>>> condition with which we have to live at the moment. >>>> >>>> My email was intended to be informative. Period. >>>> >>>> There were no suggestions that 14.0-RELEASE was not yet final. And to >>>> be fair, I had to personally deal with the fallout of a release "too >>>> soon", notably 11.0-RELEASE, where I thought a critical issue had been >>>> addressed, but I was wrong. >>>> >>>> My only point, in being overly open to the public on the delay, is that >>>> we (the Release Engineering Team) are not yet ready to rubber-stamp this >>>> as complete, as there are some outstanding items that are pending that >>>> have not yet completed. >>>> >>>> The alternative would be to say nothing at all. >>>> >>>> Either way, it is a productivity, communication drain. It is >>>> a lose-lose situation no matter how one looks at it given the above >>>> context. We either get chastised for being "too open" into insights >>>> delaying an official announcement, or for being "not open enough" when >>>> there is silence from RE when a release does not meet its scheduled >>>> announcement date. >>>> >>>> Glen >>>> >>>> >>> What ahappened was that I inititated the freebsd-upgrade RELEASE upgrade command. >>> >>> question should that RELEASe been released? >>> > > Here is what happened. Since Openssl 1.X is no longer supported > I switch to 14.0-RC4 and found for the most part > that RC4 is 98 % there. > > Given the web site saying expect a release notice around 10 Nov, > > I deciced to try to see if 14.0 RELEASE was ready. > > Since then I found 1, > > port openvpn is not stable > > > 2, wireguard FrreBSD client to FreeBSD serve is not working > > 3) Dovecot is acting glitchy. Thank you for testing and reporting, that's appreciated. Anyway, not using real name and escalating this way you look more like a troll than FreeBSD tester to me. Instead of complaining here you'd better support FreeBSD and Glen's effort by donating a few bucks to either: https://www.gofundme.com/f/gjbbsd and/or https://freebsdfoundation.org/donate/ With kind regards -- Marek Zarychta