John R. Dennison wrote:
On Thu, Jan 13, 2011 at 10:59:10PM -0600, Hubert Bahr wrote:
A different perspective. RHEL-5, CentOS-5 no matter what point change is essentially obsolete. Thus the need for RHEL-6, CentOS-6 which are
Except for the whole "supported until 2014" thing.
actually a couple of years late. How much has changed form 5.5 + updates to 5.6. How many existing systems will use the iso's instead of
Many will for new installs / rollouts where network installs,
Point made new installs/rollouts
cobbler, etc are not available to them.
yum update. Iso's are primarily used for new installs. If I am making a new install, am I waiting for 5.6 or for 6.x? I had to leave CentOS for many of my systems a couple of years ago because it did not support the newer applications. So 6 fills a void currently painfully handled by Fedora instead of an enterprise class system. Bug fixes are needed
Third-party repos provide *MUCH* of the functionality that Fedora provides; and don't bring the rolling target issues
Painful is fedora, but hardware/new apps with 5 not filling the void. Upstream recognizes the loss to other vendors so released 6.0 well before 5.6 although 5.6 is much easier.
with them.
by installed systems, they should be released as soon as the bug is fixed. Point changes are primarily a snapshot taken to speed up an install on a new system not to update a current system.
People are going to continue to install 5 until 5 is EOL. That is still 4+ years out. And as such they need ISO sets available.
Agreed but updates full fill the major majority of the needs for the current installs. I never advocated dropping 5 just keeping the release order in the same sequence as upstream.
People, at least 2.5 million if the ip count that Karanbir has mentioned is accurate, use C5; expecting that all of them are going to leave 5 behind and use 6 is just silly.
This statement was asinine since nobody expects systems "satisfied" by C5 to switch. But do not expect those dissatisfied by C5 to wait while you switch the release order of the upstream vendor.
*Many* people are locked into a platform for the life of that platform. These are *existing* users, not those planning on migrating to 6 whenever it is available.
John
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