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authorChris Hasbrouck <chjohasbrouck@gmail.com>2018-01-31 10:04:19 -0800
committerTim Graham <timograham@gmail.com>2018-01-31 13:04:19 -0500
commit92fe161e699e1d4e8377a7d6c0130f368f245a2f (patch)
treeab6192cf7b42a07aabeaa237785c3246a2b781f8 /docs/internals
parent4fe0e619e7241ed9e99ba7dee342a0785dd1f5d9 (diff)
Made minor edits and corrections to docs/internals/git.txt.
Diffstat (limited to 'docs/internals')
-rw-r--r--docs/internals/git.txt22
1 files changed, 11 insertions, 11 deletions
diff --git a/docs/internals/git.txt b/docs/internals/git.txt
index f71c1e921d..90ff3ff3c5 100644
--- a/docs/internals/git.txt
+++ b/docs/internals/git.txt
@@ -101,14 +101,14 @@ For example, immediately after *Django 1.5 alpha 1* was tagged, the branch
``stable/1.5.x`` was created and all further work on preparing the code for the
final 1.5 release was done there.
-These branches also provide limited bugfix support for the most recent released
-version of Django and security support for the two most recently-released
-versions of Django.
+These branches also provide bugfix and security support as described in
+:ref:`supported-versions-policy`.
For example, after the release of Django 1.5, the branch ``stable/1.5.x``
receives only fixes for security and critical stability bugs, which are
eventually released as Django 1.5.1 and so on, ``stable/1.4.x`` receives only
-security fixes, and ``stable/1.3.x`` no longer receives any updates.
+security and data loss fixes, and ``stable/1.3.x`` no longer receives any
+updates.
.. admonition:: Historical information
@@ -117,13 +117,13 @@ security fixes, and ``stable/1.3.x`` no longer receives any updates.
Previously, these branches weren't created until right after the releases
and the stabilization work occurred on the main repository branch. Thus,
- no new features development work for the next release of Django could be
+ no new feature development work for the next release of Django could be
committed until the final release happened.
For example, shortly after the release of Django 1.3 the branch
``stable/1.3.x`` was created. Official support for that release has expired,
and so it no longer receives direct maintenance from the Django project.
- However, that and all other similarly named branches continue to exist and
+ However, that and all other similarly named branches continue to exist, and
interested community members have occasionally used them to provide
unofficial support for old Django releases.
@@ -142,7 +142,7 @@ Feature-development branches
Feature-development branches tend by their nature to be temporary. Some
produce successful features which are merged back into Django's master to
-become part of an official release, but others do not; in either case there
+become part of an official release, but others do not; in either case, there
comes a time when the branch is no longer being actively worked on by any
developer. At this point the branch is considered closed.
@@ -192,9 +192,9 @@ part of Django itself, and so are no longer separately maintained:
Unicode-based strings in most places within Django and Django
applications. This became part of Django as of the 1.0 release.
-When Django moved from SVN to Git, the information about branch merges wasn't
-preserved in the source code repository. This means that the ``master`` branch
-of Django doesn't contain merge commits for the above branches.
+When Django moved from Subversion to Git, the information about branch merges
+wasn't preserved in the source code repository. This means that the ``master``
+branch of Django doesn't contain merge commits for the above branches.
However, this information is `available as a grafts file`_. You can restore it
by putting the following lines in ``.git/info/grafts`` in your local clone::
@@ -237,7 +237,7 @@ were never finished:
All of the above-mentioned branches now reside in ``attic``.
Finally, the repository contains ``soc2009/xxx`` and ``soc2010/xxx`` feature
-branches, used for Google Summer of Code projects.
+branches, used for the 2009 and 2010 Google Summer of Code projects.
Tags
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