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For our production and development streams the date stamp in the version string for each build reflects the time the yum repo was updated (i.e. a reflection of the freshness of the package set). This datestamp is derived from the input lockfile (that was generated by the bump-lockfile job. For mechanical streams we don't have an input lockfile with timestamps, so the datestamp version for our mechanical streams is just today's date.
It would be nice if the datestamp in the mechanical stream version numbers could also reflect the repo timestamp (package freshness indicator).
The text was updated successfully, but these errors were encountered:
I've almost talked myself into implementing lockfiles for rawhide. I feel like we need more control of that stream, but I also don't know if it's worth adding every rawhide RPM to our coreos-pool, which will balloon that resource and slow things down.
For our production and development streams the date stamp in the version string for each build reflects the time the yum repo was updated (i.e. a reflection of the freshness of the package set). This datestamp is derived from the input lockfile (that was generated by the bump-lockfile job. For mechanical streams we don't have an input lockfile with timestamps, so the datestamp version for our mechanical streams is just today's date.
It would be nice if the datestamp in the mechanical stream version numbers could also reflect the repo timestamp (package freshness indicator).
The text was updated successfully, but these errors were encountered: