> On 21 Dec 2014, at 16:53, Alain Williams <a...@phcomp.co.uk> wrote:
> 
> On Sun, Dec 21, 2014 at 02:30:28PM +0100, Nikita Popov wrote:
> 
> 
>> Please take a look at the WordPress version statistics:
>> https://wordpress.org/about/stats/
>> 
>> According to these statistics 72% of the WordPress installations are
>> running on either PHP 5.2 or PHP 5.3. This means that they do not benefit
>> from the quite substantial performance and memory usage improvements that
>> went into PHP 5.4. So, if people aren't willing to upgrade from PHP 5.2/5.3
>> to PHP 5.4, I don't see how they'd be more interested in PHP 7.
> 
> I am running PHP 5.3.3 on my servers. Why ?
> 
> Summary: running newer versions is a lot of effort.
> 
> I run CentOS 6 so I run the PHP that is packaged for it. While it might be 
> nice
> to have PHP 5.6 it would involve me in a lot of work (compile from source) 
> and I
> would need to do that with each new release/patch. As it is I just go 'yum
> update' and security fixes, ..., are all installed - easy peasy.

did you hear about RHSCL?
http://developerblog.redhat.com/2014/06/04/red-hat-software-collections-rhscl-1-1-now-ga/

it solves this usecase nicely


--
Alexey Zakhlestin
CTO at Grids.by/you
https://github.com/indeyets
PGP key: http://indeyets.ru/alexey.zakhlestin.pgp.asc



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