Caution advised for people jumping early, the Release Candidate 4 was released only ~10 days ago and didn't have the usual long testing period (usually month). More, the devs introduced major refactors late in the release cycle.
RC4 changelog includes bump to major components, most notably: hostapd, ucode, ubus, netifd.
Is that common in OpenWrt to introduce more changes between RC versions? Usually you want to stabilize everything as much as possible until the final version been released, but seems they continue to push out RCs as standard updates...
Unfortunately, yes. On top of that, they keep adding new devices in RC, keep bumping the kernel version (minor), introducing new code base (such as the new refactor on hostapd/ucode/netifd) and sometime cherry picking commits from master which I would have not chosen (not just bug fixes but features).
Don't get me wrong though, I very happy that such project exists but OpenWrt could be more stable and reliable with a better workflow. Anytime you flash a new version, you have this small fear of bricking your device (especially the exotic ones as Openwrt mainly relies on external testers).
RC4 changelog includes bump to major components, most notably: hostapd, ucode, ubus, netifd.
https://forum.openwrt.org/t/openwrt-23-05-0-rc4-fourth-relea...