On Sat, Dec 26, 2020 at 4:12 PM Chris Mair <chris@1006.org> wrote:
Before you say "Stream", the single most killer argument against Stream
is that you have broken any trust when you moved the EOL of CentOS Linux 8
from 2029 to 2021.
I think we lost a lot of trust due to a pretty serious mix-up about the EOL date announcement, but I don't think it has erased all the good Red Hat has done and continues to do.
This is not a "mix-up!" This is not an "oops, my bad!" Most
large-scale users of CentOS operate in orgs that require some
level of post-mortem analysis on major fiascos like this. If Red
Hat wants to start trying to rebuild ANY goodwill, Step 0 would be
releasing a clear and transparent post-mortem of what exactly
happened here and why. The reasons behind this have changed,
public statements and leaked statements and implications have
contradicted one another, and there's clear evidence of internal
concern.
Perhaps instead of digging the hole even further over the
holidays, Red Hat can start responding in a healthier way than it
is now.
Now Red Hat employees jump through hoops to tell us how great that'll be. What
guerantees that in two year's time you're not going to kill Stream because "it didn't
provide anything to RH"?
Nothing, we and all companies kill products all the time. I don't recall this level of outrage over mugshot. We're taking a big risk with Stream and if it doesn't work out, we'll make changes there too as we should. It makes no sense to continue doing something that isn't working out.
Who exactly is the "we" you're referring to? You can't have your
cake and eat it too when it comes to RedHat coming at the CentOS
Board and threatening an override if a decision does not go the
way it wants, knowing full well that this would have far-ranging
effects on all downstream users.
Somebody already mentioned "fool me once..."...
I'm still angry and I still cannot believe you appear to be oblivious to the huge
blunder you made with this incredible EOL shortening. You've basically killed the
CentOS brand in one single move.
We're not oblivious to it. If this were any other organization or relationship, we'd help make amends by giving you your money back. That's just not an option here. And you can say we killed it all you want, what we've done is significantly change it. You may not recognize it anymore but there are many people on this list who we talked to before the announcement and that we've seen now who are actually interested in coming on this journey with us. Thats good.
Lots of people would be interested in CentOS Stream (myself
included). You have killed CentOS Linux (the distribution). You're
equivocating here between the two sets of bits, just like you're
equivocating between Red Hat and the CentOS Project above.
I suspect the very trust that you all were putting in Red Hat to continue to produce CentOS Linux as though it were actually a 10-year enterprise-grade distribution for production was part of the problem here. To further demonstrate that problem, many of the replies I've seen look as though people did their risk assessments with "we're relying on Red Hat for our OS" instead of "We're relying on a community for our OS." I'd imagine some of you are having very awkward conversations with your management chain about this. No one using Fedora or WildFly thinks that way.
Yes. "I can't believe that a VP at Red Hat, of all places, is
being such an a** on the centos-devel list! // Me neither!" is
indeed a "very awkward conversation" to have with one's management
chain. Many of us are quite curious about what "very awkward
conversations" are happening over there.
Let me make this very clear: NO ONE out there who's responsible for more than two dozen installs of CentOS is unaware that it's a rebuild of the upstream product. No one is threatening to sue Red Hat Inc over this, because you haven't broken our contract; you've only broken our trust. Our risk assessment was that Red Hat would behave like responsible adults and the long-time leaders in the OSS community (we believed) they were, not poison its community and apparently try to salt the earth to boot.
Please stop stepping on rakes. It's making this bad situation worse.
-jc