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Re: Release Plan


From: EricZolf
Subject: Re: Release Plan
Date: Tue, 19 Nov 2019 21:10:15 +0100
User-agent: Mozilla/5.0 (X11; Linux x86_64; rv:68.0) Gecko/20100101 Thunderbird/68.2.2

Hi Patrik,

On 19/11/2019 20:54, Patrik Dufresne wrote:
Yep, sorry. About that, I intend to get appveyor working, but then I found out the current travis build for linux was not working well. Submitted a PR to fix the scm_version and did not complete it.

If you could just do a rebase on this one, that would be great, I could merge it.

Long story short, I did not take time to complete the work. But I don't have alot of free time to spent and I really want to jump in, but I'm struggling just to follow all your changes Eric :P

The trick is to learn looking TV and doing coding at the same time ;-)

Regarding the Windows build, it might also be interesting to leverage the travis windows build instead of appveyor. Would allow us to have a unique CICD pipeline instead of two.

Whatever works for Arrigo or you, I'm open! At the end the result counts. Limiting the number of technologies sounds like a good strategy, so I'm all for Travis, but if AppVeyor is easier/better for any reason, also fine.

Thanks, Eric



--
Patrik Dufresne Service Logiciel inc.
http://www.patrikdufresne.com <http://patrikdufresne.com/>/
514-971-6442
130 rue Doris
St-Colomban, QC J5K 1T9


On Tue, Nov 19, 2019 at 2:47 PM <address@hidden <mailto:address@hidden>> wrote:

    Hi Arrigo,

    any help is welcome. Patrick started to work on an Appveyor setup
    but he
    seems to be busy, so if you want to take over the issue/branch [1] and
    finish the work, drop a note in the issue to give Patrick a chance to
    react, but from my point of view, you're welcome!

    Also under `tools/windows` there is a build setup based on a Vagrant VM
    and Ansible, so feel free to take the best of all worlds (even if you
    don't "speak" Ansible, the approach should be obvious from reading
    through the yaml files and the documentation).

    Thanks, Eric

    [1] https://github.com/rdiff-backup/rdiff-backup/issues/105



    On 19/11/2019 10:54, Arrigo Marchiori wrote:
     > Hello,
     >
     > On Sun, Nov 17, 2019 at 09:29:10PM +0000, EricZolf wrote:
     >
     >> Hi,
     >> good question, let me try to summarize the current state:
     >>
     >> - migration to Python 3 is finished, there are no  known
    regressions.
     >> - we've fixed a fair amount of smaller bugs and cleaned the repo
    structure
     >> - testing on Linux is done automatically and regularly so that
    I'm quite confident about the quality of the code on this platform
     >> - testing on Windows would need more love - anybody is welcome
    to test who can compile rdiff-backup
     >
     > I developed a small build system:
     > https://github.com/ardovm/rdiff-backup-build
     > that makes an self-contained EXE file (as did previous stable
     > releases) starting from the sources of librsync and rdiff-backup.
     >
     > It can also make self-contained binaries for Linux, and possibly
    other
     > Unix-based systems (to be tested).
     >
     > Contributions, comments etc. are of course welcome.
     >
     > [...]
     >> Writing these lines, I realise that I should try to generate a
    beta release (even if only manually) so that people can more easily
    test, without the trouble of compiling the code.
     >
     > I was also expecting this. IMHO it is better to have a release tag,
     > alpha- or beta- is ok, but it must have a name, that we will be able
     > to refer to in bug reports etc.
     >
     > Once we have the tag, I could help generating the binaries, if you
     > think it would be useful.
     >
     > Best regards,
     >




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