On Tue, Dec 02, 2008 at 10:47:08AM +0100, Alan DeKok wrote: > It should be easier for *new* installs to use 2.x. Otherwise, they > install the "latest" RHEL version, and then get told to upgrade.
This is unrealistic. How should RH maintain a "sliding" base? And what does "RHEL5" mean if the version you have installed depends on the time of installation? And what about large customers having many servers installed and now install another one (with a different version)? >From what I've seen, the FreeRADIUS community is the only one where the philosophy of conservative distros is tried to be ignored. Note that I have chosen myself to run a new(er) version of FreeRADIUS on an installed base of RHEL4 servers, by "backporting" a recent Fedora src.rpm to RHEL4. So I *do* see the need in some situations for having a new version. But that's not the fault of Red Hat, it's just the way it works. Having said this, I think the frequency of new RHEL versions (4->5 was 2 years and 5->6 will be longer, as 5 is nearly 2 years old and there is no RHEL6 beta yet) is too long. Software is just getting too old that way if you want to stick to vendor-supplied versions. -- -- Jos Vos <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> -- X/OS Experts in Open Systems BV | Phone: +31 20 6938364 -- Amsterdam, The Netherlands | Fax: +31 20 6948204 - List info/subscribe/unsubscribe? See http://www.freeradius.org/list/users.html