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author | Nick Mathewson <nickm@torproject.org> | 2007-01-26 01:59:50 +0000 |
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committer | Nick Mathewson <nickm@torproject.org> | 2007-01-26 01:59:50 +0000 |
commit | 489f6185bff08278e648d944ec1a9b2d03443d21 (patch) | |
tree | ded178e269afc641461a820cb3a387feb3a4069e /doc/version-spec.txt | |
parent | d996db90b38dac225f6cda6dffdc3807a4c3d822 (diff) | |
download | tor-489f6185bff08278e648d944ec1a9b2d03443d21.tar.gz tor-489f6185bff08278e648d944ec1a9b2d03443d21.zip |
Move specification documents into new doc/spec subdirectory. (Proposals, drafts, and bad ideas still remain in doc.)
svn:r9411
Diffstat (limited to 'doc/version-spec.txt')
-rw-r--r-- | doc/version-spec.txt | 49 |
1 files changed, 0 insertions, 49 deletions
diff --git a/doc/version-spec.txt b/doc/version-spec.txt deleted file mode 100644 index 5b9aeee01b..0000000000 --- a/doc/version-spec.txt +++ /dev/null @@ -1,49 +0,0 @@ -$Id$ - -HOW TOR VERSION NUMBERS WORK -============================ - -The Old Way ------------ - -Before 0.1.0, versions were of the format: - MAJOR.MINOR.MICRO(status(PATCHLEVEL))?(-cvs)? -where MAJOR, MINOR, MICRO, and PATCHLEVEL are numbers, status is one -of "pre" (for an alpha release), "rc" (for a release candidate), or -"." for a release. As a special case, "a.b.c" was equivalent to -"a.b.c.0". We compare the elements in order (major, minor, micro, -status, patchlevel, cvs), with "cvs" preceding non-cvs. - -We would start each development branch with a final version in mind: -say, "0.0.8". Our first pre-release would be "0.0.8pre1", followed by -(for example) "0.0.8pre2-cvs", "0.0.8pre2", "0.0.8pre3-cvs", -"0.0.8rc1", "0.0.8rc2-cvs", and "0.0.8rc2". Finally, we'd release -0.0.8. The stable CVS branch would then be versioned "0.0.8.1-cvs", -and any eventual bugfix release would be "0.0.8.1". - -The New Way ------------ - -After 0.1.0, versions are of the format: - MAJOR.MINOR.MICRO(.PATCHLEVEL)(-status_tag) -The stuff in parenthesis is optional. As before, MAJOR, MINOR, MICRO, -and PATCHLEVEL are numbers, with an absent number equivalent to 0. -All versions should be distinguishable purely by those four -numbers. The status tag is purely informational, and lets you know how -stable we think the release is: "alpha" is pretty unstable; "rc" is a -release candidate; and no tag at all means that we have a final -release. If the tag ends with "-cvs" or "-dev", you're looking at a -development snapshot that came after a given release. If we *do* -encounter two versions that differ only by status tag, we compare them -lexically. - -Now, we start each development branch with (say) 0.1.1.1-alpha. The -patchlevel increments consistently as the status tag changes, for -example, as in: 0.1.1.2-alpha, 0.1.1.3-alpha, 0.1.1.4-rc 0.1.1.5-rc, -Eventually, we release 0.1.1.6. The next patch release is 0.1.1.7. - -Between these releases, CVS is versioned with a -cvs tag: after -0.1.1.1-alpha comes 0.1.1.1-alpha-cvs, and so on. But starting with -0.1.2.1-alpha-dev, we switched to SVN and started using the "-dev" -suffix instead of the "-cvs" suffix. - |