Hello .NET team,
I’ve noticed that the last two .NET 10.0 servicing releases were followed very quickly by out-of-band (OOB) updates:
I want to be clear that I’m not trying to criticize the team — I appreciate the fast response and the transparency in the blog posts.
However, as a user who relies on the stability of monthly servicing releases, these back‑to‑back OOB updates naturally raise some concerns, and I would like to better understand the situation.
Specifically:
1. About the root causes
Were these issues something that existing test coverage or validation pipelines were unable to catch?
Or were they triggered by external factors (e.g., platform changes, late security disclosures, upstream dependencies) that made them difficult to anticipate?
2. About the release process
Do these recent OOB releases indicate any broader challenges in the current servicing pipeline?
I’m trying to understand whether this is an exceptional coincidence or a sign of something structural.
3. About future mitigation
Is the team planning any adjustments or improvements to reduce the likelihood of similar post‑release OOB patches in the future?
Even high‑level information would help the community understand what to expect going forward.
Again, this question comes from a place of concern rather than blame.
I appreciate the work the team puts into maintaining .NET, and I’m simply hoping to understand the context behind these rapid OOB releases and whether there are lessons or changes the community should be aware of.
Thank you for your time.
Hello .NET team,
I’ve noticed that the last two .NET 10.0 servicing releases were followed very quickly by out-of-band (OOB) updates:
I want to be clear that I’m not trying to criticize the team — I appreciate the fast response and the transparency in the blog posts.
However, as a user who relies on the stability of monthly servicing releases, these back‑to‑back OOB updates naturally raise some concerns, and I would like to better understand the situation.
Specifically:
1. About the root causes
Were these issues something that existing test coverage or validation pipelines were unable to catch?
Or were they triggered by external factors (e.g., platform changes, late security disclosures, upstream dependencies) that made them difficult to anticipate?
2. About the release process
Do these recent OOB releases indicate any broader challenges in the current servicing pipeline?
I’m trying to understand whether this is an exceptional coincidence or a sign of something structural.
3. About future mitigation
Is the team planning any adjustments or improvements to reduce the likelihood of similar post‑release OOB patches in the future?
Even high‑level information would help the community understand what to expect going forward.
Again, this question comes from a place of concern rather than blame.
I appreciate the work the team puts into maintaining .NET, and I’m simply hoping to understand the context behind these rapid OOB releases and whether there are lessons or changes the community should be aware of.
Thank you for your time.