On Tue, Aug 13, 2024 at 11:43:32PM +0200, Morten Brørup wrote:
> Do we want to be conservative and stick with 4.19 and RHEL/CentOS 7?
AFAIK We have dropped support for Centos 7 some time back, due to lack of a
conformant compiler, I believe. We should definitely update the doc in that
regards.
> From: Stephen Hemminger [mailto:step...@networkplumber.org]
>
> On Tue, 13 Aug 2024 22:53:55 +0200
> Morten Brørup wrote:
>
> > Stephen,
> >
> > Kernel 4.19 will reach EOL in December 2024 [1], so we should skip
> ahead to 5.4 (projected EOL December 2025) or 5.10 (projected EOL
> December 202
On Tue, 13 Aug 2024 22:53:55 +0200
Morten Brørup wrote:
> Stephen,
>
> Kernel 4.19 will reach EOL in December 2024 [1], so we should skip ahead to
> 5.4 (projected EOL December 2025) or 5.10 (projected EOL December 2026).
>
> For reference, the CIP project provides a SLTS (Super Long-Time Stab
On Tue, 13 Aug 2024 22:53:55 +0200
Morten Brørup wrote:
> Stephen,
>
> Kernel 4.19 will reach EOL in December 2024 [1], so we should skip ahead to
> 5.4 (projected EOL December 2025) or 5.10 (projected EOL December 2026).
>
> For reference, the CIP project provides a SLTS (Super Long-Time Stab
Stephen,
Kernel 4.19 will reach EOL in December 2024 [1], so we should skip ahead to 5.4
(projected EOL December 2025) or 5.10 (projected EOL December 2026).
For reference, the CIP project provides a SLTS (Super Long-Time Stable) kernel
based on version 5.10 [2]. Their previous SLTS was based o
5 matches
Mail list logo