updated inxi readme for release prep

This commit is contained in:
Harald Hope 2018-03-19 21:38:43 -07:00
parent b4d797889c
commit 501f4c3c17

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@ -1,10 +1,22 @@
README for inxi - a command line system information tool
NOTE: Maintainer alert: Perl inxi 2.9.01 is looking good for maybe early
week of 2018-03-19 release. I'm putting the last issue requests on
the last forums, so assuming no real further bugs found, expect Perl
inxi 2.9.01 to hit around Monday or Tuesday. If bugs found, of course,
those will be fixed before release.
NOTE: Maintainer alert: Perl inxi 2.9.01 will be released 2018-03-20
barring unexpected huge bugs. All future issues will be handled via
github as normal inxi issues. I spent 2 weeks fielding issue reports,
on forums, and got great feedback from 'some', indeed, many distros.
Other distros failed to give any feedback, so your issues will take
last place in any issue queue because I gave you every opportuntity
to do this release right.
I didn't try all the distros because my time is finite, so if you
find glitches in your particular distro, most likely to appear in
Repos if I didn't directly test your most current syntax, post
issues on github master branch of inxi with whatever debugger data
that is requested. Failure to provide debugger data except in very
obvious cases will result in putting the issue on hold until it's
provided, and closeed if not. No data means wasting my time, to be
clear, since you're asking me to try to get bits of information
over days rather than minutes.
=====================================================================
BASIC GIT BRANCH:
@ -134,6 +146,20 @@ than it should be in the 21st century. The BSD support in inxi is an ongoing
process, with more features being added as new data sources and types are
discovered.
All BSD issue reports unless trivial and obvious will require 1 of two things:
1. a full --debug 21 data dump so I don't have to spend days trying to get the
information I need to resolve the issue from the issue poster.
2. direct ssh access to at least a comparable live BSD version, that is, if
the issue is on a laptop, access has to be granted to the laptop, or a similar
one.
I decided I have to adopt this much more strict policy with BSDs after wasting
untold hours on trying to get good BSD support, and in the end, I realized, the
only BSDs that are well supported are ones that I have had direct access to for
bebugging and testing.
I will always accept patches that are well done, if they do not break GNU/Linux,
and extend BSD support, or add new BSD features. inxi sets initial internal
flags to identify that it is a BSD system vs a GNU/Linux system, after that