On Tue, Jan 3, 2023 at 3:12 PM Ed Willink <ed.will...@gmail.com> wrote:

> I thought that Open Source was friendly; not a facilitator for a
> proprietary business case.
>

Well, sometimes allowing contributors to make money from their work is
actually one way to try being friendly.
But indeed, if one wants to do that work for free, that's even friendlier.

My understanding of the disciplined deprecation was that two major
> releases were required after an announcement, but since e6 is impossibly
> distant the platform has taken to breakage in minor versions.
> Nonetheless I would expect two releases on the yearly cadence so
> breakage within 18 months seems very wrong and to merit a regression fix.


Deprecation announced in September 2021 (4.21)
Removal in January 2022 for upcoming 4.23, 2 major releases later
Breakage found January 2023 on 4.26, 3 major releases later

The cadence is described at https://projects.eclipse.org/projects/eclipse

Ultimately, there is a clear law of software development: unmaintained
software that no-one builds or updates against newer version of its
dependencies will die; only software that someone maintains actively
survives. It's not a matter of process here, but a matter of interest in
maintaining it. If some money can be found to boost interest from someone
in maintaining here, then we all win.
_______________________________________________
cross-project-issues-dev mailing list
cross-project-issues-dev@eclipse.org
To unsubscribe from this list, visit 
https://www.eclipse.org/mailman/listinfo/cross-project-issues-dev

Reply via email to