❦ 20 août 2013 02:04 CEST, Charles Plessy <[email protected]> : >> Just to say that Debian usually has a 3 year support. > > Hi Vincent, > > this actually misleading for systems that have a long lifetime, where the > turnover matters more, and in Debian it is 2 years. In some workplaces It > means that every second year, some people would have to discuss and reach an > agreement on whether it is doable to upgrade a service, how much it will cost, > or should it be discontinued or not, etc. There, the 5-year or longer > turnover > in Ubuntu or CentOS is a winning point.
I don't get the point. If we compare to 5-year, then Debian is
3-year. Ubuntu just defines its turnover to 5 years while we say next
release plus one year which is usually 3 years.
> A long term support for core packages would definitely help me to advocate
> Debian in my workplace (and therefore use it on our servers instead of
> CentOS).
> Also, I do not think that it is relaxing our standards, since it is an
> additional service: there is no reduction in the current support.
I would also welcome such a thing. But, we seem to not have the needed
resources.
--
Use debugging compilers.
- The Elements of Programming Style (Kernighan & Plauger)
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