The Bugzilla project announces future plans

The Bugzilla project is alive and well. Project lead Dave Miller announced plans for future releases. Bugzilla is a web-based bug tracking system and testing tool originally released in 1998 as part of the Mozilla.org project, and currently supported versions include the Bugzilla 4.4 branch released in 2013 and the Bugzilla 5.0 branch released in 2015 . Dave Miller said that he tried twice in the past decade to transfer control of the project to someone else, but each time it ended because the other party had a new job. After some life-changing events, he has more time to devote to the Bugzilla project. He announced the new release plan: 4.4.14 will be the last version of the 4.4 branch; after the release of the 5.2 version, the 4.4 branch will end support in 4 months; the 5.2 version will be the next major update version, but it actually The above is the branch that released 5.0.6, because 5.0.5 and 5.0.6 introduced a lot of changes and reformatted almost all Perl code, so there was a version number jump, he will release 5.0.4.1 to continue using 5.0. Users of the 4 branch will release subsequent versions such as 5.0.4.2 in the future; the 5.1 branch is basically dead, and all resources are invested in the Harmony version. 5.9.1 will be the first official version of the Harmony branch, which is classified as a development Or a preview version, not a production version, which will eventually become Bugzilla 6.

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