Tom Lane wrote:

Yeah.  What this is about is how long the *community* supports 7.4...
Perhaps the discussion should be more global (and ultimately save time on having this discussion again in the future). Decide on the policy, make official and make it obvious. The time I usually hear tossed around is 5 years. This is the same support period that Ubuntu uses for the long-term-support releases of their server version - the longest support period they offer. As a user, 5 years seems a reasonable support period for a core infrastructure component.

Whatever time-period is chosen, I would make it obvious in a variety of places:

The versioning policy (add something like "Major releases are supported through minor-release updates for a period of five years following initial release." to http://www.postgresql.org/support/versioning).

The FAQ (add an end-of-life FAQ): http://www.postgresql.org/docs/faqs.FAQ.html

All release notes: I.e. for 7.4: "Release date: 2003-11-17 End-of-life date: 2008-11-17", for 7.4.21: "Release date: 2008-06-12 End-of-life date 2008-11-17"

Perhaps even as a comment at the start of the "installation" sections of the manual: "It is recommended to use the most recent release... Major releases are supported for..."

Cheers,
Steve


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