On 04/12/2014 06:31 PM, Dusty Mabe wrote:
On Fri, Apr 11, 2014 at 6:31 PM, Karanbir Singh mail-lists@karan.org wrote:
worth noting that this is represented as CentOS-6, dropping the point release and replacing it with a date - means we can update it more frequently than only at every point release time ( and we set user expectation around that ). We can, if there is a need, still push images that are in line with a point release snapshot.
Do you think it would be beneficial to have both the point release and the date? For example:
CentOS-6.5-20140411-x86_64-docker_01.img.tar.bz2
If you start to try to compare behavior within this image to CentOS 6.5 installed on a normal piece of hardware it might be easier if we can easily look at the image file name and know what point release to compare it to.
An argument can also be made that this might spark confusion.
Thoughts?
There is certainly value in having GA / ISO matching images in most places as well, for those - adding the point qualifyer makes sense. But I think the default image we recommend people adopt should just be the CentOS-<Release>-<datestamp> one, also available as CentOS-<Release>-latest; So people getting onboard, get the best possible experience, and those who know what they are doing and still want a GA inline release, can get it - by jumping through a hoop or two.
- KB