I do think the SuSE method of dealing with this is significantly better and I wish RH would adopt it rather than just deprecating otherwise working hardware:
https://www.theregister.com/2023/03/09/opensuse_finds_x86_64_solution/
Trevor
On 08/01/2024 10:53, Alex Iribarren wrote:
I pointed this out as well when the request for "feedback" for RHEL 10 was initially sent out (2023-03-09), but our (CERN's) concerns were dismissed. The decision to raise the baseline is forcing us to migrate away from RHEL for all the industrial control systems that manage the experiments and accelerators, and it may well precipitate further changes.
Cheers, Alex
On 1/7/24 16:44, Neal Gompa wrote:
On Sun, Jan 7, 2024 at 10:36 AM John Cooper via CentOS-devel centos-devel@centos.org wrote:
Dear Sir/Madam,
You’re currently exploring raising the instruction set base line, which will exclude some systems and also people (who are unable to afford to upgrade to reach the new baseline). I however want to draw your attention to the plans, to disable or remove megaraid based hardware from Dell. Doing so will cause issues and leave behind people in the home lab community behind. Also there’s also videos circulating from as recently as during 2022 recommending the Dell PowerEdge R620 rack servers.
The people in the home lab community are in essence a source of recommendations for people considering whether or not to acquire Red Hat’s services. So having them on side is a very good thing!
Just something to consider during RHEL 10’s development.
I will also point out with my contributor hat on, I would have some serious trouble with a raised baseline to x86_64-v3, as I only have one computer that is capable of it (barely). The rise to x86_64-v2 was painful enough, but -v3 would be quite a problem for me and result in throwing away even more hardware, which is not exactly a very environmentally friendly thing to do...
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