On Thu, May 31, 2012 at 11:26 AM, Stefan Sperling <s...@elego.de> wrote: >> > >> > We don't fix these kinds of bugs in the 1.6 series anymore. >> > The 1.6 series receives only security or data corruption fixes. >> >> Do you happen to know how the decision is made to update the >> subversion rpm included in RHEL6.x? Projects that jump their version >> numbers all the time and let old versions remain broken tend to >> conflict badly with 'enterprise ' distributions that want stable APIs. >> There have been rare exceptions to bumping application versions >> within an RHEL major rev lifespan but mostly in desktop type apps. >> The odds are very likely that any unfixed bugs in 1.6 are going to >> continue to affect a lot of people on RHEL/CentOS for another decade. > > Why should we spend our time maintaining old code for RedHat's customers?
I don't know what you have against RedHat's customers, but a much larger base of CentOS and Scientific Linux users will get exactly the same versions delivered in their update stream in the free rebuilds. > In this case, the burden to backport these fixes is on RedHat/CentOS, not us. > They're the ones shipping outdated code to their customers (for a good reason, > since their customers value stability over new features and non-critical > bugfixes). We don't ship the outdated code. It is more a question of whether you want users to get fixes for the bugs you did ship. If you are happy with a lot of users continuing to have problems for the next decade, then fine. Just don't be surprised when the issues keep getting reported. -- Les Mikesell lesmikes...@gmail.com