Wireshark-dev: Re: [Wireshark-dev] Wireshark LTS branches
From: Anders Broman <anders.broman@xxxxxxxxxxxx>
Date: Thu, 17 Apr 2014 08:23:35 +0000

-----Original Message-----
From: wireshark-dev-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:wireshark-dev-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of Bálint Réczey
Sent: den 17 april 2014 09:59
To: Gerald Combs
Cc: Developer support list for Wireshark
Subject: Re: [Wireshark-dev] Wireshark LTS branches

Hi Gerald,

2014-04-17 1:59 GMT+02:00 Gerald Combs <gerald@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>:
> On 4/16/14 3:42 AM, Bálint Réczey wrote:
>> Hi,
>>
>> Many of you probably know about the Wireshark package [1] in Debian 
>> which I started maintaining a few years ago. Like every other package 
>> in Debian, the version of Wireshark included in the major 
>> distribution release is getting security and stability updates 
>> through the lifetime [2] of the major distribution release which is 
>> typically 3 years, but it is still shorter than the lifetime of an 
>> Ubuntu LTS (5 years) or Red Hat [3] (10 years).
>>
>> Wireshark, the Project, makes a major release every year and 
>> according our current policy we support [4] the current and previous 
>> release which makes Wireshark releases lifetime 2 years.
>>
>> Wireshark makes point releases after each major release fixing bugs 
>> adding minor features and improvements, but only the security and 
>> some stability related fixes get included in updates to the Debian package.
>> Since the Debian packages have longer lifetime than Wireshark release 
>> I back-port security related fixes to older releases than the project 
>> which means that I already maintain two Wireshark branches with 
>> security fixes only in the form of patch sets [5]. Other distribution 
>> maintainers do the same.
>>
>> Since we moved to Git maintaining the branches became easier and I 
>> would like to as the project to allow me to maintain the two existing 
>> branches in the projects repository. Going forward I would like to 
>> open one similar branch for at least every Debian major release and 
>> maintain at least through the major release's lifetime.
>>
>> I think it would not create any significant additional work for the 
>> community but it would provide many advantages.
>>
>> 1. We could provide an upgrade path for people focused only on 
>> security but not on other improvements keeping the existing release 
>> plan.
>> 2. Distribution maintainers could eliminate the duplicate work by 
>> collaborating in the LTS branches.
>> 3. Back-ported fixes could get better testing using the existing 
>> buildbot infrastructure.
>> 4. Back-ported fixes could be reviewed by more people.
>>
>> One additional note regarding Debian, we (at Debian) are thinking 
>> about extending the lifespan of each release to 5 years [7] and this 
>> would extend my commitment to maintaining the Wireshark LTS branches 
>> naturally.
>>
>> Would the Project be open for the proposed branches?
>
> Overall it sounds fine to me. How many branches would be created and 
> how would they be named?
I would like to create two branches forking off from 1.2.11 1.8.2 because those are the base versions for Debian oldstable and stable.
If others are interested, we could find an LTS forking point for every major branch, but those are which I maintain already.

The next could fork off from 1.12.x based on the freeze date for next stable, which is November 5th. If other distributions are interested we could find a forking point which would fit their release schedule as well.

Cheers,
Balint

Hmm this seems backwards to me, if the distributions don't take the point releases we make, there is something wrong with our point releases or we shouldn't be making them in
The first place if no one is using them. Seems like a lot of work for nothing to me.

Should we change our backport policy to fit the distributions need or are they to different to have a fits all procedure. Perhaps the distribution should point out which backports to do?

Best regards
Anders 
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