Hi This situation seems to have changed with the release of RHEL 7.7. It now includes Python 3.7 without having an addition repository per the announcement.
https://www.zdnet.com/article/final-red-hat-enterprise-linux-7-version-released/ No idea when this will show up as a CentOS 7 upgrade. But this seems close to eliminating a barrier for moving to a newer Python. --joel On Mon, Aug 5, 2019 at 1:06 AM Chris Johns <chr...@rtems.org> wrote: > On 2/8/19 6:10 pm, Sebastian Huber wrote: > > Hello, > > > > the EOL of Python 2.7 is soon, so it will be Python 3 for sure: > > > > https://pythonclock.org/ > > > > The EOL of Python 3.4 was March 18, 2019: > > > > https://www.python.org/downloads/release/python-3410/ > > > > Is it all right to start with Python 3.5? > > > > As a general rule the widest range of versions the better but that sort of > statement is easy to say and a pain to figure out. There needs to be > compelling > reason to have just python3 things that are not supported by `future`. Yes > the > clock is ticking for Py2 but a timely change means different things to > different > people. > > Importing a separate package is different. We cannot control what happens > with > that package however we can control if that specific tool is made > available and > installed. This means such a tool does not effect the other tools that may > work. > > Chris > _______________________________________________ > devel mailing list > devel@rtems.org > http://lists.rtems.org/mailman/listinfo/devel >
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