Today, Thanksgiving Day, we are declaring the WiX v3.5 in escrow. If you follow my twitter account, you saw this tweet yesterday. The WiX v3.5.2325.0 release is the first v3.5 build with zero open bugs. That pretty much defines done! So, what is next for v3.5?
First, download this build of WiX v3.5. I know it's only been a month since the Halloween RC and you just got done upgrading. However, I believe this build has very good odds of being the final WiX v3.5 build. We're just going to sit in escrow for a month or watching for that show stopper bug.
Second, file any bugs you hit in WiX v3.5. Now do not be surprised if the bug gets moved to WiX v3.6 or later. We're looking for showstopper bugs. The bugs that hose key scenarios with no workaround. Of course, the key areas where there might be showstoppers are in IIS7 and Visual Studio 2010 integration since that's where we've done most bug fixing in the last six months.
Finally, spread the word. WiX v3.5 escrow arrived faster than I anticipated because the crew did some amazing work (especially, Eric) and our bug incoming rate remained stable. In fact, I expect that if we don't find any major showstopper issues then we could declare WiX v3.5 Production quality in 6 - 8 weeks.
There you have it. WiX v3.5 escrow release with a possible final release around the New Year. Download it now and get coding! You know I am... ;)
RobMensching.com LLC
7 Comments
Comment by Eugene on Thursday, November 25, 2010 4:02 PM
Could this build be digitally signed though so that we feel more comfortable deploying it on reasonably-secured build servers?
Comment by Rob Mensching on Sunday, November 28, 2010 7:42 AM
Comment by Eugene on Sunday, November 28, 2010 4:24 PM
It'd be nice to have a signed build because obviously having the WiX download hijacked by some DNS cache-poisoning leading to malware infecting just-built binaries which then go to customers is a very unwelcome possibility.. I would be willing to contribute some cash to make it happen.
Comment by Brad on Friday, December 3, 2010 8:43 AM
Comment by Rob (Not the blog Rob) on Tuesday, December 7, 2010 2:03 PM
You could also roll your own cert (cost = free) and publish the cert chain on the website. Not quite as secure, but doable.
Comment by Kelly on Wednesday, December 15, 2010 2:45 PM
Comment by Billy on Thursday, March 31, 2011 1:08 PM