further updates
mkdocs build / build (push) Successful in 29s Details

This commit is contained in:
Louis Abel 2024-03-04 12:06:26 -07:00
parent b93d762f06
commit c7dfa3ca1c
Signed by: label
GPG Key ID: B37E62D143879B36
2 changed files with 6 additions and 1 deletions

View File

@ -8,7 +8,7 @@ title: Release Engineering (SIG/Core)
The Rocky Linux Release Engineering Team (who also refers to themselves as SIG/Core) dedicates themselves to the development, building, management, production, and release of Rocky Linux. This group combines development and infrastructure in a single cohesive unit of individuals that ultimately make the distribution happen.
While not a strict Special Interest Group (as defined by [the Rocky Linux wiki](https://wiki.rockylinux.org/special_interest_groups/)), the primary, overarching goal (or "interest") is to ensure Rocky Linux is built and released in a complete and functional manner.
While not a strict Special Interest Group (as defined by [the Rocky Linux wiki](https://wiki.rockylinux.org/special_interest_groups/)), the primary overarching goal (or "interest") is to ensure Rocky Linux is built and released in a complete and functional manner.
## Mission

View File

@ -8,8 +8,13 @@ Some of the things we do in pursuit of our mission goals:
* Continuous preparation for upcoming changes from upstream (Fedora and CentOS Stream)
* Distribution release and maintenance
* Design and collaboration for the Peridot build system
* Design and development work to integrate all components together
* Maintenance of the infrastructure used to build and maintain Rocky Linux (such as ansible roles and playbooks)
* Working with the testing team with images and a platform to test
* Providing resources for Special Interest Groups
* Providing assistance and resources for users within the community
"Why the name SIG/Core?"
While not an actual [Special Interest Group](https://wiki.rockylinux.org/special_interest_groups/), the reality is that Release Engineering is ultimately the "core" of Rocky Linux's production. The idea of "SIG/Core" stemmed from the thought that without this group, Rocky Linux would not exist as it is now, so we are "core" to its existence. The other idea was that SIG/Core would eventually branch out to elsewhere. Where this would go, it is uncertain.