Jeffrey Ollie wrote:
On Fri, Oct 10, 2008 at 8:33 AM, Dmitry Butskoy
<buc(a)odusz.so-cdu.ru> wrote:
> This situation seems to be reflected in the Fedora project itself. Guess,
> how many Fedora infrastructure servers are run under the latest "stable"
> Fedora release?
>
Almost none. The reason is simple - the Fedora project does not have
infinite resources, the most important of which is time. As can be
seen from the recent intrusion, completely rebuilding the
infrastructure takes a lot of time and causes a lot of pain. It's a
better use of human resources to use RHEL in the Fedora Infrastructure
so we don't have to be continually rebuilding systems
I would prefer that Fedora would be stable enough, thus does not require
"continually rebuilding systems" ;)
When the infrastructure of some distribution use this distribution
immediately, the quality of the distribution is compelled to be much
higher. In other words, when you create a bug, it is much better when
this bug strikes your head at the same time, rather than someone will
report it in bugzilla, where it will be delayed for a long time...
~buc