Dennis Jacobfeuerborn wrote: > Also MySQL 5.6 gains some of its speed through [non-Free] commercial > extensions (like e.g. the thread pool). That's one more reason to NOT ship MySQL in Fedora now that there is an alternative: It's crippleware! > All of this benefits Fedoras users. Software intentionally crippled to be able to sell proprietary "extensions" to it is NOT beneficial to our users! > Besides I don't think excluding a specific piece of software without > technical reasons would set a somewhat dangerous precedent. As long as > there are people willing to maintain these packages and the packages > themselves follow all necessary guidelines they should be allowed to do > so. Just look at how this has been handled with XFree86 vs. X.Org: The maintainers of XFree86 in Fedora decided to switch to X.Org, so the package was renamed, rebased to the new upstream and Obsoletes made the migration automatic and with no hassle at all for our users. Why can't we do the same here? Just because some Oracle folks desperately want to keep THEIR version of the software in Fedora (and the ones who actually would be doing the packaging haven't even spoken here, nor do they have any experience with official Fedora packages, as opposed to crappy upstream RPMs which would almost certainly not pass review as is), we're going to 1. overrule the experienced Fedora MySQL maintainers and 2. maybe even require the users to migrate MANUALLY to the recommended solution? Surely that cannot be it! I don't see why that would be in Fedora's nor its users' interest. I sure hope you aren't going to propose reviving XFree86 in Fedora! Kevin Kofler -- devel mailing list devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx https://admin.fedoraproject.org/mailman/listinfo/devel