The goal of this suite of pages is to gather the collective wisdom of Debian developers on new release methodologies for Debian, with an aim toward reversing the current trend of it taking longer and longer for us to make a release.

This set of pages is being developed because while plenty of people have made various suggestions on debian-devel, this has only resulted in threads with hundreds of messages, with debate being more rational in some places than others.

Feel free to add new pages, or add new arguments pro or con to a page, but do respect the opinions of others and bear in mind that the idea is to arrive at a set of well specified proposals for how Debian can release, and not to promote your idea over all others. If your opinion does not represent the consensus of a pro or con for a release method, add it as a comment with your name on it.

Current:

Proposals for giving up on releasing:

Proposals for splitting up the release:

Proposals for speeding up the release process:

Proposals for cranking up the workload even more:

Besides a new release process, it is also very interesting to figure out why the current process scales so badly. What are the obstacles?

This is an evolving document -- refer to RecentChanges to find newly updated pages.

And while we are at it here is a list of solutions what to do with the ideas and proposals above:


- Christain (Debian user)

-- Gene (Debian User)

-- Phil (Debian user and sysadmin)

There are lots of misconceptions about why the Debian releases are delayed and lots of proposals attempt to fix non-existent problems. This cause lots of flamewars on non-issues. A monthly evaluation of our position toward the release all along the release cycle could help. That could give us a better anticipation and maybe help us release sooner. For example, I participated in a BSP in July 2003 on the assumption sarge would be out in 2003. Had I better anticipated, I would have learn about debian-installer design instead to be able to help the d-i team in February 2004.

-- BillAllombert