On 06/09/2014 12:55 PM, Stephen John Smoogen wrote:
Well I think this is more about defining what people think of as change and no change. Being the internet I am sure there are some set of people who will define any new release as being a change in the core product and thus a breakage. And there will be people who are at the other end of the spectrum and ok with all the change in the world as long as the name is CentOS and the first number is similar to the RHEL name. And then there are a ton of definitions of what is change and what isn't in between.
So a better discussion is I think people defining what they would accept as being 'change' and what is not change. The board has stated their view of change and various users are defining in a piecemeal way what is their definition of change. I think that it might be better if the users state a bit clearer so that the board has a definite idea of where the lines are.
It's more than just a cosmetic change. Any 3rd party installer that relies on the version number in /etc/redhat-release will break as a result of this change (bad practice, but it happens). Any manager that does not understand that CentOS 7.YYMM == RHEL 7.X will be much harder to convince.
This is most definitely a break from compatibility.
Peter