On Wed, 2006-01-18 at 14:23 +0100, Arjan van de Ven wrote: > On Wed, 2006-01-18 at 14:50 +0200, Gilboa Davara wrote: > > Hello all, > > > > I've been following a very interesting discussion in fedora-list about > > the recent transfer of FC3 to Fedora Legacy. > > > > Following Rahul's suggestion, I'm starting this discussion in -devel. > > > > I'm asking the FC foundation to consider the following: > > > > 1. Fedora's policy dictates that old releases (Current - 2) will be > > retired once the new release hits Test2. > > I'm missing in your whole reasoning the link between the transfer to > legacy and upgrading. You imply it, but you don't explain the causal > relationship, which I think isn't there. > > The policy actually sort of is "a few months after the next release so > that people can see it being stable enough". A good anchor for that "few > months" is -test2 release. Taken from the release note: "[59][Caution] This is a test release, not intended for end users This is a test release and is provided for developers and testers to participate and provide feedback. It is not meant for end users." Somehow, this doesn't sound too inviting. While I agree that people should have switched to FC4 by now (though I too use FC3 on some machines... somehow, at least for me, FC3 was a better release), or be prepared to use FL when it EOLs. I'm just looking to give people a-bit of extra time to sleep on it. > > > This policy has one glaring > > drawback: User that seek an upgrade can either (1) install a mid-life > > release (FC4 in this case) or (2) install a beta release. (FC5 Test2 in > > this case). > > this is true for any update decision unless you make that decision right > at the point in time a new release just came out. Again, I accept that people (including myself) tend to delay things until things smack them in the face. (God knows I do). Having FL kick in when the current release is... released and having an automated switch to FL tool is the best combo IMHO. It'll give people an option to either: A. Automatically move to FL. B. Upgrade to a mid-life release. (FC5) C. Upgrade to bleeding edge release. (FC6). > > > This being I suspect that most users will play the waiting game before > > making a decision. They'll wait for the FC5 release and check how it > > behaves before making a decision, which in turn, will leave them > > vulnerable to security exploits. > > I don't agree with this "which in turn". Fedora Legacy *WILL* release > updates for such security problems. The only thing that changed is which > people will provide the updates. That's it. Well and the policy that > only the most critical things (eg security updates and data corruption > bugs etc) get fixed. But.. don't you want that from a 14th month old > distro.. if it works for you for 14 months, you don't want mass upgrades > to new packages just for a few features you obviously didn't need anyway > (because if you did you'd have upgraded) > My main point is: Switching over to FL isn't stream-lined/automated. Most unsuspecting/novice users, (which are the ones most likely to delay/forget the upgrade, and ones most likely to miss the "hand-over-to-FL" message) are the ones least likely to be able to do the FL transition by themselves. Even-worse, these are the last users on this planet that you'll want to leave unprotected by default. (Again, as the FL transition is mostly manual) > > > > Extending the life of FC4 by (a mere?) ~2 months, will give FC4 users > > seeking an upgrade a chance to make an informed decision based upon how > > FC6 behaves, without leaving them open to security risks. > > And then the next request will be that "FC5 is so new, please allow us 3 > months before FC5 becomes stable". And voila, you're back at "test 2" > again. Again I point you to the test release - release notes. Even FC foundation treats test releases differently then normal releases. > > The current policy is based on the idea "You go to the next release. But > we'll be nice and give you several months for that next release to be > seen as stable". That's it. You are effectively asking to extend it a > full release.. (well you're not asking that, but that's the implication > of what you're asking given the very obvious and known next question > that will happen) > Why stop there? How about giving 3 year, RHEL like support? j/k. No. FC is a community driven (well, sort of) bleeding edge distro and should stay that way. I just find the EOL at test2 release (especially considering the possibility of test3/4/5/6 releases) to be... well... less then desirable. Gilboa -- fedora-devel-list mailing list fedora-devel-list@xxxxxxxxxx https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-devel-list