Also "trunk" makes no sense at all, we don't use svn anymore. Is this even mentioned anywhere? I don't think it should. The reason I am attracted to "daily" or "nightly" is that it immediately conveys the "timeliness" of the image. You intuitively grok that it's today's version, and there will likely be a new one tomorrow.
For me, "snapshot" conveys an important saved state. I have snapshots of my VMs, snapshots of a website at a particular time, etc. Those snapshots preserve something that I might, someday, wish to return to. So I'd lobby for the word "daily" or "nightly", and then lobby that we apply it everywhere - in the wiki, the forum, and the name of the directory on the download server.
Except that the builds are not really nightly or daily, more often than not, there're multiple revisions happening on the same day of active development and there are days when no new revisions happen. There's also no connection between a particular day and the revision number. Like if I say I'm on Cyanogenmod from October 18th, it makes it cm I'm not in the know about the latest developments on how OpenWrt and LEDE will coexist, but it would be a great help if LEDE continued where OpenWrt left it DD or if both projects are to continue forward that the release names be synchronized, as to avoid confusion which release is newer.
That of course would require coordination between projects to name releases based on measurable criteria, like the kernel version or something and not just "our next release". Their numbering is arbitrary, doesn't even coincide with the SDK version. To summarize, call them stable and development dev. Both words perfectly reflect what the builds are without creating any confusion. That's what BSDs have been using for years and it works fine? I believe that one of the most important tasks we founders can achieve is in selecting names for things.
A well chosen name helps people understand stuff immediately; a badly-chosen name means there's always a bit of confusion, a moment of hesitation, especially for newcomers. Let's get this right. Really, developers don't need names nor releases. I prefer semantic versioning. Looking at OpenWrt from a userperspective: "Can I easily update from Anyone can answer this question?
Dates are good enough, for answering questions there is documentation or FAQs that are far more friendly. Trying to e. From that perspective I like the date-based versioning. A good reference point is Ubuntu, which has a 6-month release cycle and is similarly a compilation of various packages.
I disagree about using semantic versioning as defined by steinmb. LEDE is a collection of different packages which might use their own semver scheme flying in loose formation.
LEDE needs an overall name for each of its stable releases, which define a specific set of packages. I am attracted to the notion of date versioning - Minor versions could be However, the version e.
It was confusing that CC was named Keep getting fixes and the code mature. Releasing 1. Log in. Install the app. Contact us. Close Menu. JavaScript is disabled. For a better experience, please enable JavaScript in your browser before proceeding. You are using an out of date browser. It may not display this or other websites correctly.
You should upgrade or use an alternative browser. RC vs. Nightly builds. Thread starter hansumstranger Start date Apr 15, Joined Nov 4, Messages 31 Reaction score 0. I've never installed a nightly on my phone, so pardon the ignorance.
Can anyone give me some feedback on how the latest nightly works compared to RC4? Do I have to wipe and install or? No stable available right now, you'd have to wait for the next snapshot build will take time Use nightlies for now without updating them Try out CyanDelta.
Hear it's great. So you want to know about the latest Nightly build of Mokee? Auto compiled builds of the latest changes in Mokee source. These builds aren't officially supported and they may or may not be stable. These builds are better suited for more experienced users and developers. I want to know if its stable and has any bugs in it not on what it is.. And yes thats the right version i wanna know about. He just answered your query.
Regarding bugs, you need to install it and see for yourself. Is the nightly built on new kernel? Yes its a nightly build. But i will wait for the release version. Hello everyone, I've always liked CM and the different features it offers, so I was planning to flash latest Snapshot since I would like to use it as my daily driver.
What's your experience with it? Any major bugs? Is it stable enough? I'm currently running latest stock build 5.
Thanks for your help. The latest snapshot isn't bad, but I've had more success with the nightlies simply because they have patches that haven't made it into the snapshot builds yet. I'd say try out a couple nightlies and just stick with one that doesn't have any issues for you. Could you recommend any nightly in particular to begin with? I want to put CM rom on my gf's wildfire and i didn't find anywhere the difference between the regular and the nightly version Nightlies are experimental versions, which may be better than the stable, but, it may sometimes also have bugs not present in the stable.
The building of nightlies is a continuous process, with a new nightly released everyday. For your gf's phone, I would probably recommend you go with the stable. What is the difference between these two ROM threads? Are the Nightlies more updated than the the RC1? Is the RC1 just a more stable release?
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