The Gluster community is pleased to announce the release of Gluster 3.9. This is a major release that includes a number of changes. Many improvements contribute to better support of Gluster with containers and running your storage on the same server as your hypervisors. Additionally, we've focused on integrating with other projects in the open source ecosystem. This releases marks the completion of maintenance releases for Gluster 3.6. Moving forward, Gluster versions 3.9, 3.8 and 3.7 are all actively maintained. Our full release notes: http://gluster.readthedocs.io/en/latest/release-notes/3.9.0/ Upgrade Guide is available here: http://gluster.readthedocs.io/en/latest/Upgrade-Guide/upgrade_to_3.9/ -- Amye Scavarda | amye at redhat.com | Gluster Community Lead
On 23/11/2016 11:23 PM, Amye Scavarda wrote:> Our full release notes: > http://gluster.readthedocs.io/en/latest/release-notes/3.9.0/Oh excellent, thanks all. Better crank up my test server again ..> > Upgrade Guide is available here: > http://gluster.readthedocs.io/en/latest/Upgrade-Guide/upgrade_to_3.9/ >Good to see this clearly documented, the rolling upgrade is pretty much what I have done in the past. -- Lindsay Mathieson _______________________________________________ Announce mailing list Announce at gluster.org http://www.gluster.org/mailman/listinfo/announce
On 11/23/2016 8:23 AM, Amye Scavarda wrote:> Gluster > versions 3.9, 3.8 and 3.7 are all actively maintained.This might be a bit of a silly question, but how would one know which version of Gluster to use? If you wanted to use Gluster as a scratch space for an HPC cluster, and needed a solid, stable setup for a production environment, what would be the recommended version to install? Thanks, -Dj