news 28 Posted October 10, 2013 [ This is a shameless copy-and-paste from last year ] For the timezone challenged, as of 2100UTC today, the archive is officially fozen in preparation of release candidates and the final release of Saucy Salamander in a week. This is three hours from the time I hit send on this email. Uploads from here on in should fall into the following 4 bins: 1) Installer/release-critical bugs that absolutely MUST get fixed lest we risk shipping a broken image that turns computers pink or sets them on fire: Please contact the release team about these bugs and upload (well-tested) solutions ASAP. Last minute hardware enablement fixes, and pretty much anything installer related that is auditable and testable also falls in to this category, as our best installer testing comes in the next few days, historically. Some people may have noticed that we're also in the process of spinning up a new port right now (our timing is impeccable, is it not?), so uploads with clear and targetted FTBFS fixes for arm64 will continue to be accepted for seeded packages until Sunday night, and for unseeded pretty much right up to release. 2) Non-release-critical-but-nice-to-have bugfixes: These are fixes that you would absolutely feel comfortably about doing as an SRU but not necessarily destabilising the release process for. Again, contact the release team, and we may slip some of these in, while asking you to defer the rest to SRUs. 3) Feature additions, massive code refactoring, user interface changes, non-typo string changes: Just don't upload these, or ask about them. The time for them came and went long ago. 4) Updates to non-seeded packages: Technically, unseeded packages don't freeze until pretty much right before release. While this is true, we may still try to talk you out of pushing some huge new upstream version of something, or start a library transition at the zero hour. We're only a week away from opening the next release, a bit of patience (or prepping in a PPA, etc) might be a decent plan. Here's hoping everyone gets on board with testing images, helping to fix absolutely critical bugs, donating spare creative cycles to the release notes, and any other way we can all contribute to yet another great Ubuntu release. ... Adam -- Share this post Link to post