> This is the latest release that runs on JDK11

This point makes sense to me. Actually I think it's the latest release
that runs on JDK 8 though the recommended JDK for 2.10 is 11. The only
question from me is when should 2.10 be EOL?

Thanks,
Yunze

On Fri, Jun 9, 2023 at 3:15 PM Enrico Olivelli <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> Micheal,
>
> Il giorno ven 9 giu 2023 alle ore 07:54 Michael Marshall
> <[email protected]> ha scritto:
> >
> > Hi Pulsar Community,
> >
> > I recently noticed this page on our website:
> > https://pulsar.apache.org/contribute/release-policy/#supported-versions
> >
> > It shows that only 2.11 and 3.0 are active and security support.
> >
> > I am guessing the timelines were taken from a strict reading of PIP
> > 47. However, we haven't historically followed the EOL timelines for
> > PIP 47 strictly, so I want to check here.
> >
> > For 2.8, I think we should declare it EOL or perform once last release.
>
> I agree
>
> >
> > For 2.9, I think we could do the same as 2.8, but I am not sure if
> > that would surprise users.
>
> I am not sure, but as far as I know, 2.9 was kind of a transitional
> release, and I agree
>
> >
> > For 2.10, I think we should not consider it EOL.
>
> This is the latest release that runs on JDK11, we really cannot drop
> support for this.
> It would be worth declaring this LTS, as long as JDK11 is still widely used.
>
> This issue was discussed many times when we decided to move to JDK17 on 2.11.
>
> Cheers
> Enrico
>
>
> >
> > Let me know what you think.
> >
> > (Reminder: all feedback is welcome, especially from users!)
> >
> > Thanks!
> > Michael

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