The second release candidate of FreeBSD 7.2 has been released. “The second of the two planed Release Candidates for the 7.2-RELEASE cycle is now available. We believe with the exception of the new bce(4) driver not working with lagg(4) all the major issues that have come up from the testing have been addressed. We will work with the vendor to
get that issue addressed post-release.”
I tried to find a list containing the new features present in 7.2 but couldn’t find it. Does anybody know where I can get it? Thank you in advance.
The release notes will be available once the release has occured.
Less to none features but many fixes,updated drivers etc. pp. So it’s more a stabilizing release than aa feature release. For the latter you have to wait for 8.0.
Thanks, now it all makes sense.
I really don’t want to troll all FreeBSD releases, because it is a good OS by itself, but it doesn’t make sense.
If your cycle revolves around major releases, you don’t publicize .1 releases as if they were something.
They are bug fixes, Debian releases are similar to FreeBSD and you don’t hear from them every next week because a RC of a RC of a bugfix to a lenny package has been released. OpenBSD released a beta of their upcoming 4.5 version with actual internal modifications and improvements over 4.4 and they didn’t make any noise just to be posted all over the internets news’ sites.
Even people here at OSNews want to hear about zfs, virtualization and multithreading and not about a fix you imported from NetBSD for an unknown device nobody uses.
It’s just a mailing list post. You don’t see any fancy “ONLY n DAYS TO 7.2″ countdown timers on their site either. The “fuzz” is made up completely by the OSAlert staff. And you.
Edited 2009-04-27 06:36 UTC
One nice feature is multi-IP/IPv6 support in jails: http://lists.freebsd.org/pipermail/freebsd-jail/2009-February/00072…
I surmise the minor release is made widely known so
persons can test it out, prior to the
final release. Also, persons using only
releases rather than “stable ” “current”
branches might want to upgrade.
Many thanks to all involved with this release!
With this release (and the upcoming release of OpenBSD on 1st May), there’s lots of “BSD goodness” to try out in the next few days…
Don’t forget DragonFlyBSD 2.2.1