On 1/16/20 5:03 PM, Gianluca Cecchi wrote:
On Thu, Jan 16, 2020 at 11:08 PM Peter peter@pajamian.dhs.org wrote:
On 17/01/20 8:06 am, Lamar Owen wrote:
On 1/16/20 6:49 AM, Peter wrote:
On 16/01/20 4:14 am, Brian Stinson wrote:
Release for CentOS Linux 8 (1911)
We are pleased to announce the general availability of CentOS Linux 8.
CentOS 8 was released in September 2019. Don't you mean 8.1?
No, they mean CentOS 8 (1911). This was hashed to death back in early CentOS 7 days, so shouldn't need rehashing again......
No, the hashing ove back then had nothing to do with dropping the minor release number. Doing that now is just making things way too confusing.
Back then the vast majority of the community showed disapproval for even that new naming scheme, but the wishes of the community were ignored and the new naming scheme went ahead anyways. I doubt anything different will happen now.
Yeah, I know most people are going to call it 8.1,
That's because it *is* 8.1 and calling it 8 (1911) is just confusing and ridiculous.
Peter
I think that the e-mail subject of the announcement could be a bit misleading. Also for 7.x the subject for the latest one, posted by Johnny, was:
"Release for CentOS Linux 7 (1908) on the x86_64 Architecture"
Actually at CentOS 7 time, after some discussions, developers accepted to have both "numbers" inside release information.
For example on running systems you have
- for 7.x
On 7.6: # cat /etc/centos-release CentOS Linux release 7.6.1810 (Core)
# lsb_release -r Release: 7.6.1810
On 7.7: # cat /etc/centos-release CentOS Linux release 7.7.1908 (Core)
# lsb_release -r Release: 7.7.1908
And this has been maintained in 8.x too: On 8.0: # cat /etc/centos-release CentOS Linux release 8.0.1905 (Core)
# lsb_release -r Release: 8.0.1905
On the just released 8.1 # cat /etc/centos-release CentOS Linux release 8.1.1911 (Core)
# lsb_release -r Release: 8.1.1911
This is acceptable in my opinion from a final user point of view
I'm not sure but possibly the origin of the loooong discussion thread was this one from Karanbir, if interested: https://lists.centos.org/pipermail/centos-devel/2014-June/010444.html
Let's just say this:
We are ALWAYS going to officially call the releases:
'CentOS 8 (1911)' and 'CentOS 7 (1908)'
We are going to do it regardless of who does like it or who does not like it (myself included).
It is just the way it is and how it will be. It has been this way since the original CentOS 7 release and it is not ever changing.
Never, until the next change of course :-)
Wasn't it like that because RHEL maintains multiple .X levels while CentOS always only represents the current, newest level. So omitting the .X level was intended to prevent such confusion we actually see.
Simon