Dave posted on Sat, 19 Nov 2016 02:49:57 +0000 as excerpted: > I note that Ubuntu 14.04LTS has an EOL date of April 2019 so someone at > Ubuntu should be dealing with keeping the packages up to date, including > both Pan and GNUtls. Or does LTS just mean the actual distro and > whatever packages are available, potentially "stuck" at whenever it was > last compiled?
Umm... Generally the whole idea with LTS releases is that you get security-fixes only, and those are normally backported to whatever version was shipped at release, the idea being if it's not broken, don't "fix" it, and actually break it. A few select kernel drivers may be updated, again by backporting, and a _very_ few select kernel features backported as well, generally to work with new hardware or support some "must-have" enterprisish feature, but that's about it. So... pretty much "stuck", as you said. Of course some of us spell it stale^H^Hble and prefer to stay far away from it, certainly for our desktops/laptops/workstations, but others pay good money to do that, and for servers at least they arguably have a point. Tho I suppose for the "I just want it to work and not break or change functionality I'm used to working in in a particular way" folks, that's arguably what they want/need on their personal machines as well. But of course that's anything but me, so... Of course there do tend to be third party repos that have updates for this or that, if the distro is popular enough to have grown that sort of community ecosystem around it, but those of course don't tend to be supported by the distro, and sort of break the whole ideal of stale^H^Hble as well and one would /think/ that people would choose a faster cycling distro if they wanted updates, but these repos do tend to be popular in some quarters so what can I say? Anyway, arguably trying to update pan to 0.140 is out of keeping with the whole idea of the staleness of stability that is the point of an LTS, so that it won't build with encrypted-connection support is perhaps for the best... for people that chose that staleness in the first place and continue to want it in general. -- Duncan - List replies preferred. No HTML msgs. "Every nonfree program has a lord, a master -- and if you use the program, he is your master." Richard Stallman _______________________________________________ Pan-users mailing list Pan-users@nongnu.org https://lists.nongnu.org/mailman/listinfo/pan-users