Re: [CentOS] EL 6 rollout strategies? (Scientific Linux)

2011-05-19 Thread Dag Wieers
On Mon, 16 May 2011, Johnny Hughes wrote:

 It will be released when it is released, if you don't like it then leave.

Before I leave this list let me take you back about 7 years to the 
Whitebox mailinglist. You may not remember that Whitebox had a list of 
issues of its own, no timely updates, no community effort, lack of good
communication. It was mostly a one-man-effort.

And the people on that list who were not pleased, included Johnny and 
Karanbir. And it's striking (and ironic) how similar the discussions went 
7 years ago. Johnny said:

   [WBEL-users] WBEL Vs Centos ? :-S
   http://beau.org/pipermail/whitebox-users/2004-December/004761.html

   If timely updates are not a key factor for you, then WBEL is a great
   distro.  If timely updates are the most important thing you consider
   about the distro you want, then WBEL might not be a fit for you.  That
   is all I have ever said ... and I have never said it meanly.

or:

   [WBEL-users] WBEL Vs Centos ? :-S
   http://beau.org/pipermail/whitebox-users/2004-December/004740.html

   I just think people should not have the expectation the WBEL is
   community operated, it is not.  It's NOT like debian or gentoo where
   others can get involved.  I know, I tried really hard to do so many
   times.

Karanbir said:

   [WBEL-users] WBEL ...dead?
   http://beau.org/pipermail/whitebox-users/2004-December/004684.html

   Be a lil difficult to sell that to the IT Manager / CTO : Hang tight
   dude, its comming. Anytime now.

or:

   [WBEL-users] WBEL ...dead?
   http://beau.org/pipermail/whitebox-users/2004-December/004709.html

   Why ? the other RHEL recompiles dont have this 'its coming, hang on'
   attitude do they ?

   If there is a security issue out there, you can put in a fairly good
   idea as to when its possible to deploy with them. Whats the scene with
   WBEL ?

The only difference I see is that back then Whitebox had only a fraction 
of users, and even less using it for critical mission, while nowadays 
people rely even more on timely security updates and releases coming from 
CentOS. And people expect to help and contribute to the process to make 
that happen.

Which, contrary to what is stated now, was an essential part in the start 
and growth of the CentOS project.

Anyay, goodbye and thanks for all the fish !
-- 
-- dag wieers, d...@wieers.com, http://dag.wieers.com/
-- dagit linux solutions, i...@dagit.net, http://dagit.net/

[Any errors in spelling, tact or fact are transmission errors]
___
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@centos.org
http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos


Re: [CentOS] EL 6 rollout strategies? (Scientific Linux)

2011-05-19 Thread B.J. McClure
On Thu, 2011-05-19 at 13:54 +0200, Dag Wieers wrote:
 On Mon, 16 May 2011, Johnny Hughes wrote:
 
  It will be released when it is released, if you don't like it then leave.
 
 Before I leave this list let me take you back about 7 years to the 
 Whitebox mailinglist. You may not remember that Whitebox had a list of 
 issues of its own, no timely updates, no community effort, lack of good
 communication. It was mostly a one-man-effort.

snip


 Anyay, goodbye and thanks for all the fish !

Sorry to see you go, Dag.  Your technical input to this list over the
years has, IMHO, been valuable.  And whether or not I agreed with your
opinion input, it was always presented in a professional manner.

This is my first, and last, post to this line of threads, but frankly, I
have greater concern for the lack of professionalism shown by some on
this list in the last few months than the timeliness, or lack thereof,
of updates.

IMHO, personal attacks and profanity directed at any list member is
always grossly inappropriate.

Thanks for your contributions.

B.J.

RHEL 6.0, Linux 2.6.32-71.29.1.el6.x86_64

___
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@centos.org
http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos


Re: [CentOS] EL 6 rollout strategies? (Scientific Linux)

2011-05-19 Thread Craig White
On Thu, 2011-05-19 at 13:54 +0200, Dag Wieers wrote:
 On Mon, 16 May 2011, Johnny Hughes wrote:
 
  It will be released when it is released, if you don't like it then leave.
 
 Before I leave this list let me take you back about 7 years to the 
 Whitebox mailinglist. You may not remember that Whitebox had a list of 
 issues of its own, no timely updates, no community effort, lack of good
 communication. It was mostly a one-man-effort.
 
 And the people on that list who were not pleased, included Johnny and 
 Karanbir. And it's striking (and ironic) how similar the discussions went 
 7 years ago. Johnny said:
 
[WBEL-users] WBEL Vs Centos ? :-S
http://beau.org/pipermail/whitebox-users/2004-December/004761.html
 
If timely updates are not a key factor for you, then WBEL is a great
distro.  If timely updates are the most important thing you consider
about the distro you want, then WBEL might not be a fit for you.  That
is all I have ever said ... and I have never said it meanly.
 
 or:
 
[WBEL-users] WBEL Vs Centos ? :-S
http://beau.org/pipermail/whitebox-users/2004-December/004740.html
 
I just think people should not have the expectation the WBEL is
community operated, it is not.  It's NOT like debian or gentoo where
others can get involved.  I know, I tried really hard to do so many
times.
 
 Karanbir said:
 
[WBEL-users] WBEL ...dead?
http://beau.org/pipermail/whitebox-users/2004-December/004684.html
 
Be a lil difficult to sell that to the IT Manager / CTO : Hang tight
dude, its comming. Anytime now.
 
 or:
 
[WBEL-users] WBEL ...dead?
http://beau.org/pipermail/whitebox-users/2004-December/004709.html
 
Why ? the other RHEL recompiles dont have this 'its coming, hang on'
attitude do they ?
 
If there is a security issue out there, you can put in a fairly good
idea as to when its possible to deploy with them. Whats the scene with
WBEL ?
 
 The only difference I see is that back then Whitebox had only a fraction 
 of users, and even less using it for critical mission, while nowadays 
 people rely even more on timely security updates and releases coming from 
 CentOS. And people expect to help and contribute to the process to make 
 that happen.

The irony is so thick you can cut it with a knife. Those of us who were
whitebox users surely remember how the updates came slower and slower
and our sense of frustration of never knowing how/if/when the updates
would come. Your reminder (because I had forgotten) that they used
timeliness as the main selling point for switching to CentOS well... if
that isn't a wake up call to Johnny  Karanbir, then nothing will do it.

At least John Morris never made any pretense of whitebox being a
community project nor did he promise updates to be anything except on
his own timetable. I remember how awkward I felt when Johnny would use
the WBEL mail list to suggest to people to switch to CentOS and laughed
the other day when he was rather perturbed because the CentOS list was
used to promote the idea of switching to SL. More irony.

I resolved to not install WBEL 4.0 on any system because I couldn't
trust it to be timely and now, here we are at 6.0 and I feel the same
way about CentOS. Full circle.

The sycophants on this list probably don't recognize just how valuable
the 'dag' repo (aka rpmforge) has been to the RHEL/CentOS/SL/etc.
ecosystem but my feeling is that if Dag can't hold the CentOS dev's feet
to the fire, then no one can. Evidently I am one of the ungrateful
bastards
http://lists.centos.org/pipermail/centos/2011-May/111670.html but you
could never be considered to be one of them.

Craig


-- 
This message has been scanned for viruses and
dangerous content by MailScanner, and is
believed to be clean.

___
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@centos.org
http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos


Re: [CentOS] EL 6 rollout strategies? (Scientific Linux)

2011-05-19 Thread R - elists
 
Dag wrote:
 Before I leave this list let me take you back about 7 years 
 to the Whitebox mailinglist. You may not remember that 
 Whitebox had a list of issues of its own, no timely updates, 
 no community effort, lack of good communication. It was 
 mostly a one-man-effort.

bummer to see you go Dag...

yet as you know, everything has issues... 

if one mainly looks for or at things in a negative perspective, you will
always find more of same...

yet believe it or not, if you look for the good, and count your blessings
based on it, the count of such will never end...

some are ungrateful, yes... but for the most part they are sinfully ignorant
 think way too highly of themselves

what is truly, seriously ironic is that the ignorant / ungrateful crowd gets
a chance to come out of the woodwork... you know the ones... they havent
done whatever is necessary to (in major way) help centos as a whole and/or
do any core centos work during CentOSs' lifetime (7 years ???) while the
core centos heros carry the majority of the load the whole time.

then when the proverbial doody hits the fan and the centos heros (as always)
roll up sleeves  multiple distro works are progressing at a variable rate

the ignorant act like they have all the answers and can help the centos
heros, YET the ignorant never actually roll up their sleves and do anything
to help.

mainly lots of crying and peeping like helpless baby birds waiting for food.

i may not be 100% correct, yet one thing i have picked up on over the years
in relationship to volunteering for CentOS is that the centos heros do not
have time to BABY and SPOON FEED new recruits.

 - rh



___
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@centos.org
http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos


Re: [CentOS] EL 6 rollout strategies? (Scientific Linux)

2011-05-18 Thread Ljubomir Ljubojevic
Tom H wrote:
 On Mon, May 16, 2011 at 7:45 PM, Ljubomir Ljubojevic off...@plnet.rs wrote:
 Gordon Messmer wrote:
 On 05/15/2011 06:10 PM, Johnny Hughes wrote:
 Where is Ubuntu telling people exactly where they stand on producing a
 their new releases.

 What about Red Hat ... how about Fedora.
 I don't know about Ubuntu, I don't use it.

 Fedora, on the other hand publishes their schedule:
 http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Releases/15/Schedule
 And the release life cycle:
 http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Fedora_Release_Life_Cycle
 And their release criteria:
 http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/QA/ReleaseCriteria
 And release engineering documentation, including the names of
 responsible persons and directions for getting involved:
 http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/ReleaseEngineering
 And standard operating procedures:
 http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/ReleaseEngineering/SOP

 The release criteria includes a Bugzilla list for a release blocker bug
 which shows users what issues currently need to be resolved before the
 release.  Users are very well informed about the state of the project.

 Fedora uses Koji to build packages.  Users can view build logs in the
 Koji interface as well.

 After building packages, maintainers push to Bodhi, where users can test
 the package and indicate success or failure before the package is
 finally published.

 If CentOS were run even remotely like Fedora, these discussions wouldn't
 come up.
 There is no way that CentOS or any other REBUILD project can be run as
 DEVELOPMENT project where you can build as you like. Scan both mailing
 lists few months back where those differences were thoroughly explained.
 
 Look at the above. It was Johnny H who brought up the other
 distributions when he should've only chosen to compare CentOS to SL,
 by your standards. Whatever their reasons, the CentOS developers don't
 want to publish that information. Users can ask (as many have) but
 it's the decision of the developers and that's it. Bringing it up day
 after day isn't particularly productive but those who do so are free
 to do so - and their motives shouldn't be assumed to be negative. For
 those who'd like to see that policy change, bringing it up from time
 to time (once a year for example) might be worthwhile.

Tom, you are way off the point I was making. RHEL, Fedora, Debian, 
Ubuntu, all other distro's are *developed* and can change at any time. 
You can track changes, contribute patches and track progress (if you 
have access). Anything you build at any point of time is exactly what 
you want. How ever you compile it, what you wanted is what you got.

CentOS is *recreating* RHEL, and must/wants to make it *exactly* like 
RHEL is, as much as possible. There is no development (for 90-95% of the 
packages) to patch contributions, no we are changing our build 
environment for this release because this one is better. You are 
reverse engineering complete product. All of this was, at length, 
discussed on this or devel list, look it up if you can not wrap your 
head around this concept/problem.

Ljubomir
___
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@centos.org
http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos


Re: [CentOS] EL 6 rollout strategies? (Scientific Linux)

2011-05-18 Thread Les Mikesell
On 5/18/11 5:05 AM, Ljubomir Ljubojevic wrote:

 Tom, you are way off the point I was making. RHEL, Fedora, Debian,
 Ubuntu, all other distro's are *developed* and can change at any time.
 You can track changes, contribute patches and track progress (if you
 have access). Anything you build at any point of time is exactly what
 you want. How ever you compile it, what you wanted is what you got.

There are closed software/OS development processes too.  If your mindset is 
that 
closed is better, why are you even interested in Linux where most wouldn't 
exist 
and certainly not be as nice if it weren't open and had attracted otherwise 
unpredictable support and input.

 CentOS is *recreating* RHEL, and must/wants to make it *exactly* like
 RHEL is, as much as possible. There is no development (for 90-95% of the
 packages) to patch contributions, no we are changing our build
 environment for this release because this one is better.

It was discussed, but that doesn't change anyone's mindset about open vs. 
closed 
processes or whether being more open and permitting community insight and 
participation would ultimately keep the project from going the way of Whitebox. 
   Yet another public posting on the topic linked from
http://distrowatch.com/weekly.php?issue=20110516#news
http://blog.2ndquadrant.com/en/2011/05/the-rise-and-fall-of-centos.html

 You are
 reverse engineering complete product. All of this was, at length,
 discussed on this or devel list, look it up if you can not wrap your
 head around this concept/problem.

There's also a reasonable question about whether this process could be better 
automated, in which case it becomes typical software development for programs 
that solve the dependencies and find and assemble the requirements.

-- 
   Les Mikesell
 lesmikes...@gmail.com
___
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@centos.org
http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos


Re: [CentOS] EL 6 rollout strategies? (Scientific Linux)

2011-05-18 Thread Brunner, Brian T.

 There's also a reasonable question about whether this process could
 be better automated, 

How do you *automate* a system where the fundamental rules change
'without notice to users'?

 in which case it becomes typical software development for programs
 that solve the dependencies and find and assemble the requirements.

Rebuilding somebody else's sources without their build environment isn't
typical.  It's MindReading 101.



Insert spiffy .sig here:
Life is complex: it has both real and imaginary parts.
Life is not measured by the number of breaths we take, but by the
moments that take our breath away. 


//me
***
This email and any files transmitted with it are confidential and
intended solely for the use of the individual or entity to whom
they are addressed. If you have received this email in error please
notify the system manager. This footnote also confirms that this
email message has been swept for the presence of computer viruses.
www.Hubbell.com - Hubbell Incorporated**

___
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@centos.org
http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos


Re: [CentOS] EL 6 rollout strategies? (Scientific Linux)

2011-05-18 Thread Lamar Owen
On Wednesday, May 18, 2011 09:23:14 AM Brunner, Brian T. wrote:
 Rebuilding somebody else's sources without their build environment isn't
 typical.  It's MindReading 101.

It's worse than that in the specific case of EL6.  It's replicating the result 
without replicating the build system.  It's a pretty well-known thing that 
upstream is building with Koji fed from a source code management system;  
CentOS is not as far as we know (and it's overkill anyway, unless you add 
several things to the distribution as SL does, and they're using Koji for SL6, 
and started learning Koji and setting up their buildsystem for 6 nearly a year 
ago).  Koji in fact will not allow, by default, a 'normal' user to rebuild from 
source RPM, but requires building out of the SCM for normal users.  The case of 
a 'from source RPM' rebuild is not Koji's forte.

It's also fairly well-known that mock builds in koji and mock builds outside of 
koji can sometimes differ.  Grep the archives of several lists to verify that; 
I've seen it before, but I don't have time at the moment to pull up the 
reference.  I have a VAX to redisk and boot up
___
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@centos.org
http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos


Re: [CentOS] EL 6 rollout strategies? (Scientific Linux)

2011-05-18 Thread Tom H
On Wed, May 18, 2011 at 9:01 AM, Les Mikesell lesmikes...@gmail.com wrote:
 On 5/18/11 5:05 AM, Ljubomir Ljubojevic wrote:

 Tom, you are way off the point I was making. RHEL, Fedora, Debian,
 Ubuntu, all other distro's are *developed* and can change at any time.

That's why I said he should've only chosen to compare CentOS to SL.
___
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@centos.org
http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos


Re: [CentOS] EL 6 rollout strategies? (Scientific Linux)

2011-05-18 Thread Les Mikesell
On 5/18/2011 8:23 AM, Brunner, Brian T. wrote:

 There's also a reasonable question about whether this process could
 be better automated,

 How do you *automate* a system where the fundamental rules change
 'without notice to users'?

You have the results you want to reproduce.  You have a list of likely 
suspects for the components involved (some of which may be the same as 
your binary results). You have a way to test if your output is a 
reasonable match. The part in between can either be brute force trial 
and error, predictions based on hints from file or source change 
timestamps on the components and target outputs, looking at the library 
linkages you want to reproduce, or some combination thereof. The 'list 
of likely suspects' and where to find them might be hard to automate but 
it's something that might benefit from more eyes.

 in which case it becomes typical software development for programs
 that solve the dependencies and find and assemble the requirements.

 Rebuilding somebody else's sources without their build environment isn't
 typical.  It's MindReading 101.

Whether a computer program can simulate mindreading better than a person 
(reading someone else's mind)is still up in the air.  My money would be 
on the computer going forward anyway, especially if speed is one of the 
ways you judge the results.  Whether exposing the process to the 
community would ever result in such techniques being developed or even 
scaling out the brute force approach is equally speculation.  The more 
fundamental question here is whether the current timeframes are a 
problem for anyone or if there is any need to change the existing 
process.  And that discussion seems to be off limits with the only 
choice being to switch to a different disto or start a new project if 
you don't think the existing approach is perfect.  At this point that 
discussion is probably counterproductive for this release, but the 'open 
is better' suggestions have always been brushed rudely aside. At least 
there _is_ another distro suitable at least for testing purposes.

-- 
   Les Mikesell
 lesmikes...@gmail.com
___
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@centos.org
http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos


Re: [CentOS] EL 6 rollout strategies? (Scientific Linux)

2011-05-18 Thread Johnny Hughes
On 05/18/2011 08:01 AM, Les Mikesell wrote:
 It was discussed, but that doesn't change anyone's mindset about open vs. 
 closed 
 processes or whether being more open and permitting community insight and 
 participation would ultimately keep the project from going the way of 
 Whitebox. 

Hello Les,

CentOS is used on more web servers than Red Hat Enterprise Linux and
Fedora combined ... it is not going anywhere.

Also, the slight decrease that was happening in Linux in general (which
was mirrored by CentOS) in October of 2010 is also corrected.


http://w3techs.com/technologies/details/os-centos/all/all

Facebook uses thousands of CentOS servers.  They are quite happy with
it.  Amazon EC2 has thousands of CentOS servers.  They are also quite
happy with it. We just became a fully supported OS on Microsoft Hyper-V.

Can we do a better job at some things, sure.  But trust me, CentOS is
going nowhere.

Thanks,
Johnny Hughes



signature.asc
Description: OpenPGP digital signature
___
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@centos.org
http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos


Re: [CentOS] EL 6 rollout strategies? (Scientific Linux)

2011-05-18 Thread Emmanuel Noobadmin
On 5/19/11, Johnny Hughes joh...@centos.org wrote:
 Can we do a better job at some things, sure.  But trust me, CentOS is
 going nowhere.

I think you might mean CentOS is not going away since going
nowhere fast or slow is bad news for those waiting for the next
version ;)
___
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@centos.org
http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos


Re: [CentOS] EL 6 rollout strategies? (Scientific Linux)

2011-05-17 Thread John Doe
Maybe all the non-technical discussions could go into a CentOS 
Politics/Philosophy new list...?

JD
___
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@centos.org
http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos


Re: [CentOS] EL 6 rollout strategies? (Scientific Linux)

2011-05-17 Thread Benjamin Franz

On 05/16/2011 02:44 PM, ne...@grayhatlabs.com wrote:

I never thought sliced bread was all that great.

Wouldn't it be better for people to donate money to help push things along
faster?

I mean if your really upset about how long its taken to come out why don't
you donate some money to help the people who are working for free?


Love to. Actually got approval from my company to do so years ago: The 
project donations page has been down (CentOS is currently reviewing our 
cash donation program. In the mean time we are not accepting any 
financial donations. We do appreciate though, if you want to - for 
example - help out with promo material. See our Wiki page on donations 
http://wiki.centos.org/Donate for more up to date information.) for 
around two years now.


It is very hard to take dev complaints about how 'no one wants to 
contribute' seriously when the devs have avoided setting up an easy 
mechanism for people to contribute money *to the project* for years now. 
Money doesn't solve all problems (and creates some new ones of its own), 
but it can pay developers, buy new servers for development, and create 
other resources.


But I will not throw money at the devs as no-string gifts to them as 
individuals. If they want to 'board the gravy train' by making a living 
from the project, I'm thrilled for them. I've no problem with people 
being compensated for their work. Form a formally chartered organization 
with accountable mechanisms for paying the devs. Go to town on it.


If they just want people to give them money personally (which some devs 
have, perhaps tongue in cheek, suggested on this list) with no 
accountability or expectation that that money actually specifically 
support the project, well, they can keep dreaming.


--
Benjamin Franz


___
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@centos.org
http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos


Re: [CentOS] EL 6 rollout strategies? (Scientific Linux)

2011-05-17 Thread Scott Silva
on 5/16/2011 3:08 PM R P Herrold spake the following:
snip
 [I see 14 new posts within the past hour that composing this 
 piece has taken ... If I had known the comment by 'Radu 
 Gheorghiu' was coming, about 'waiting for somebody to come and 
 fill their pockets', I would have spent it productively 
 instead.  I think hughesjr was right with his comment that 
 speaking here is just not worth it --- I'd rather get work 
 done than talk in such a hostile environment]
 
 -- Russ herrold

Don't feel too bad... Out of the thousands of CentOS users, and the hundreds
subscribed to this list, I only see a dozen or so people complaining You
could be producing happy rainbows out of thin air, and you would probably
still have a few percentage points of the users complaining

Just remember that although most are silent, they are being silent so you can
get something done besides having to defend yourselves...


___
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@centos.org
http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos


Re: [CentOS] EL 6 rollout strategies? (Scientific Linux)

2011-05-17 Thread Scott Silva
on 5/16/2011 2:45 PM cen...@911networks.com spake the
following:
 On Mon, 16 May 2011 13:47:30 -0500
 Johnny Hughes joh...@centos.org wrote:
 
 Can't you ungrateful bastards take the free software I make by
 following the licensing requirements and be happy with that?
 
 Johnny please don't take this personally. I don't know who came with
 the expression:
 
 When you fight with a pig, you both get dirty - but the pig likes it
 
 They like it and your blood pressure rise. Not worth it. Don't listen
 to them.
 
 PS. I'm one of the silent majority! I run a few v4 and v5. Thanks for
 the hard work.
 
+11


___
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@centos.org
http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos


Re: [CentOS] EL 6 rollout strategies? (Scientific Linux)

2011-05-17 Thread m . roth
Scott Silva wrote:
 on 5/16/2011 3:08 PM R P Herrold spake the following:
 snip
 [I see 14 new posts within the past hour that composing this
 piece has taken ... If I had known the comment by 'Radu
 Gheorghiu' was coming, about 'waiting for somebody to come and
 fill their pockets', I would have spent it productively
 instead.  I think hughesjr was right with his comment that
 speaking here is just not worth it --- I'd rather get work
 done than talk in such a hostile environment]

 Don't feel too bad... Out of the thousands of CentOS users, and the
 hundreds subscribed to this list, I only see a dozen or so people
 complainingYou could be producing happy rainbows out of thin air,
 and you would probably still have a few percentage points of the users
 complaining

There will be *no* happy rainbows here, and if you bring in unicorns,
*then* you'll see flames.

   mark

___
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@centos.org
http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos


Re: [CentOS] EL 6 rollout strategies? (Scientific Linux) (not)

2011-05-17 Thread m . roth
Johnny Hughes wrote:
 On 05/17/2011 09:46 AM, Scott Silva wrote:
 on 5/16/2011 3:08 PM R P Herrold spake the following:
 snip
 [I see 14 new posts within the past hour that composing this
 piece has taken ... If I had known the comment by 'Radu
 Gheorghiu' was coming, about 'waiting for somebody to come and
 fill their pockets', I would have spent it productively
 instead.  I think hughesjr was right with his comment that
 speaking here is just not worth it --- I'd rather get work
 done than talk in such a hostile environment]

 Don't feel too bad... Out of the thousands of CentOS users, and the
 hundreds subscribed to this list, I only see a dozen or so people
 complaining
snip
 It is *Millions* of CentOS users :D

 And there are 4200 subscribed to this list.

Must be millions:
http://linux.slashdot.org/story/11/05/16/2022259/Microsoft-To-Support-CentOS-Linux-In-Hyper-V

M$ wouldn't even see anything smaller.

  mark

___
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@centos.org
http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos


Re: [CentOS] EL 6 rollout strategies? (Scientific Linux) (not)

2011-05-17 Thread Scott Silva
on 5/17/2011 9:36 AM m.r...@5-cent.us spake the
following:
 Johnny Hughes wrote:
 On 05/17/2011 09:46 AM, Scott Silva wrote:
 on 5/16/2011 3:08 PM R P Herrold spake the following:
 snip
 [I see 14 new posts within the past hour that composing this
 piece has taken ... If I had known the comment by 'Radu
 Gheorghiu' was coming, about 'waiting for somebody to come and
 fill their pockets', I would have spent it productively
 instead.  I think hughesjr was right with his comment that
 speaking here is just not worth it --- I'd rather get work
 done than talk in such a hostile environment]

 Don't feel too bad... Out of the thousands of CentOS users, and the
 hundreds subscribed to this list, I only see a dozen or so people
 complaining
 snip
 It is *Millions* of CentOS users :D

 And there are 4200 subscribed to this list.
 
 Must be millions:
 http://linux.slashdot.org/story/11/05/16/2022259/Microsoft-To-Support-CentOS-Linux-In-Hyper-V
 
 M$ wouldn't even see anything smaller.
 
   mark
The buyout will be next... ;)


___
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@centos.org
http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos


Re: [CentOS] EL 6 rollout strategies? (Scientific Linux) (not)

2011-05-17 Thread Christopher Chan
On Wednesday, May 18, 2011 02:58 AM, Scott Silva wrote:
 on 5/17/2011 9:36 AM m.r...@5-cent.us spake the
 following:
 Johnny Hughes wrote:
 On 05/17/2011 09:46 AM, Scott Silva wrote:
 on 5/16/2011 3:08 PM R P Herrold spake the following:
 snip
 [I see 14 new posts within the past hour that composing this
 piece has taken ... If I had known the comment by 'Radu
 Gheorghiu' was coming, about 'waiting for somebody to come and
 fill their pockets', I would have spent it productively
 instead.  I think hughesjr was right with his comment that
 speaking here is just not worth it --- I'd rather get work
 done than talk in such a hostile environment]

 Don't feel too bad... Out of the thousands of CentOS users, and the
 hundreds subscribed to this list, I only see a dozen or so people
 complaining
 snip
 It is *Millions* of CentOS users :D

 And there are 4200 subscribed to this list.

 Must be millions:
 http://linux.slashdot.org/story/11/05/16/2022259/Microsoft-To-Support-CentOS-Linux-In-Hyper-V

 M$ wouldn't even see anything smaller.

mark
 The buyout will be next... ;)


Please Johnny, don't sell us out!
___
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@centos.org
http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos


Re: [CentOS] EL 6 rollout strategies? (Scientific Linux)

2011-05-17 Thread Ralph Angenendt
Am 17.05.11 13:37, schrieb Benjamin Franz:
 On 05/16/2011 02:44 PM, ne...@grayhatlabs.com wrote:
 I never thought sliced bread was all that great.

 Wouldn't it be better for people to donate money to help push things along
 faster?

 I mean if your really upset about how long its taken to come out why don't
 you donate some money to help the people who are working for free?
 
 Love to. Actually got approval from my company to do so years ago: The
 project donations page has been down (CentOS is currently reviewing our
 cash donation program. In the mean time we are not accepting any
 financial donations. We do appreciate though, if you want to - for
 example - help out with promo material. See our Wiki page on donations
 http://wiki.centos.org/Donate for more up to date information.) for
 around two years now.

Which somehow seems to be a sign that money is not what is needed by the
project. It is after all a project run by people which have normal jobs
on the side.

 It is very hard to take dev complaints about how 'no one wants to
 contribute' seriously when the devs have avoided setting up an easy
 mechanism for people to contribute money *to the project* for years now.
 Money doesn't solve all problems (and creates some new ones of its own),
 but it can pay developers, buy new servers for development, and create
 other resources.

We're still looking for people offering things like promo swag which can
then be given away at fairs (especially things like preprinted DVDs,
Shirts and other giveaway things). Maybe I should update that page to
point at the wiki page http://wiki.centos.org/Donate which already has
some of that stuff. Money is not really what the project is after.

 If they just want people to give them money personally (which some devs
 have, perhaps tongue in cheek, suggested on this list) with no
 accountability or expectation that that money actually specifically
 support the project, well, they can keep dreaming.

I wonder which devs that should have been - well I haven't read this
list for some time, so I probably overlooked it.

Ralph
___
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@centos.org
http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos


Re: [CentOS] EL 6 rollout strategies? (Scientific Linux)

2011-05-17 Thread Tom H
On Mon, May 16, 2011 at 7:45 PM, Ljubomir Ljubojevic off...@plnet.rs wrote:
 Gordon Messmer wrote:
 On 05/15/2011 06:10 PM, Johnny Hughes wrote:

 Where is Ubuntu telling people exactly where they stand on producing a
 their new releases.

 What about Red Hat ... how about Fedora.

 I don't know about Ubuntu, I don't use it.

 Fedora, on the other hand publishes their schedule:
 http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Releases/15/Schedule
 And the release life cycle:
 http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Fedora_Release_Life_Cycle
 And their release criteria:
 http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/QA/ReleaseCriteria
 And release engineering documentation, including the names of
 responsible persons and directions for getting involved:
 http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/ReleaseEngineering
 And standard operating procedures:
 http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/ReleaseEngineering/SOP

 The release criteria includes a Bugzilla list for a release blocker bug
 which shows users what issues currently need to be resolved before the
 release.  Users are very well informed about the state of the project.

 Fedora uses Koji to build packages.  Users can view build logs in the
 Koji interface as well.

 After building packages, maintainers push to Bodhi, where users can test
 the package and indicate success or failure before the package is
 finally published.

 If CentOS were run even remotely like Fedora, these discussions wouldn't
 come up.

 There is no way that CentOS or any other REBUILD project can be run as
 DEVELOPMENT project where you can build as you like. Scan both mailing
 lists few months back where those differences were thoroughly explained.

Look at the above. It was Johnny H who brought up the other
distributions when he should've only chosen to compare CentOS to SL,
by your standards. Whatever their reasons, the CentOS developers don't
want to publish that information. Users can ask (as many have) but
it's the decision of the developers and that's it. Bringing it up day
after day isn't particularly productive but those who do so are free
to do so - and their motives shouldn't be assumed to be negative. For
those who'd like to see that policy change, bringing it up from time
to time (once a year for example) might be worthwhile.
___
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@centos.org
http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos


Re: [CentOS] EL 6 rollout strategies? (Scientific Linux)

2011-05-16 Thread Dag Wieers
On Thu, 12 May 2011, Johnny Hughes wrote:

 On 05/12/2011 10:09 AM, Craig White wrote:
 On May 12, 2011, at 2:05 AM, Ron Blizzard wrote:
 On Thu, May 12, 2011 at 1:08 AM, Mark Bradbury mark.bradb...@gmail.com 
 wrote:

 Do you expect the C6.0 - C6.1 differences to be more complex, or less
 complex than the C5.5 - C5.6 differences ?

 And given that C5.6 took 3 months, are there any reasons why C6.1 would
 take no more than 1 month ?

 Get over yourself Dag ... for goodness sake.

 Why? seems like a valid point to me.

 But at that time there should only be one point release on the table,
 instead of two point releases and one major release. Is everyone
 forgetting that 4.9, 5.6 and 6.0 were all out at the same time?

 2 months elapsed from release of 6.0 before 5.6 and more than another month 
 before 4.9

 Hardly qualifies at the same time unless you consider 3 months to be 
 essentially the same time.

 The ZERO release is always going to take longer than the others.

Past numbers debunks this myth:

 CentOS 4.0 took 23 days

 CentOS 5.0 took 28 days

 CentOS 6.0 is not released after 6 months.

While eg.

 CentOS 4.8 took 3 months

 CentOS 5.6 took 3 months

See also:

 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CentOS

-- 
-- dag wieers, d...@wieers.com, http://dag.wieers.com/
-- dagit linux solutions, i...@dagit.net, http://dagit.net/

[Any errors in spelling, tact or fact are transmission errors]
___
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@centos.org
http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos


Re: [CentOS] EL 6 rollout strategies? (Scientific Linux)

2011-05-16 Thread Ron Blizzard
On Mon, May 16, 2011 at 2:44 AM, Dag Wieers d...@wieers.com wrote:
 On Thu, 12 May 2011, Johnny Hughes wrote:

 The ZERO release is always going to take longer than the others.

 Past numbers debunks this myth:

     CentOS 4.0 took 23 days

     CentOS 5.0 took 28 days

     CentOS 6.0 is not released after 6 months.

You left out and failed to respond to the following explanations.

From Johnny Hughes earlier response:

~~
The ZERO release is always going to take longer than the others.

The Original CentOS 3 release did not even have a ZERO release.  We
didn't finish it until 3.1 had been out for some time and we released
3.1 as our first release.

That first release happened (for 3.1) on 3.19.2004:
http://lists.centos.org/pipermail/centos/2004-March/15.html

The Red Hat 3.0 release happened on October 23, 2003.

That is 5 months.

The 4.0 release cycle and the 5.0 release cycle was much better because
the Beta and RC releases were much closer in time and content to the
actual released ISOs and we were able to build the first release version
on our beta.

This is NOT the case with 6.0.  First off, we can not use any of the
existing infrastructure to build on because we can not build on a CentOS
4 or CentOS 5 machine because of the changing of MD5SUM in the RPMs
themselves.

Secondly, the distribution will not build on the Beta (much like the 3.x
release and UNLIKE the 4.0 and 5.0 releases).  Not only that, but
upstream used many non released packages to build on ... packages we
can not see or get.

Now, because of those things and because we choose to stop work on 6.0
to build out 5.6 and 4.9, the 6.0 release is late.
~~

Note, the reasons why 4.0 and 5.0 *could* be released more quickly:

The 4.0 release cycle and the 5.0 release cycle was much better because
the Beta and RC releases were much closer in time and content to the
actual released ISOs and we were able to build the first release version
on our beta.

And why 6.0 (like 3.0) is a different animal.

This is NOT the case with 6.0.  First off, we can not use any of the
existing infrastructure to build on because we can not build on a CentOS
4 or CentOS 5 machine because of the changing of MD5SUM in the RPMs
themselves.

Secondly, the distribution will not build on the Beta (much like the 3.x
release and UNLIKE the 4.0 and 5.0 releases).  Not only that, but
upstream used many non released packages to build on ... packages we
can not see or get.

And also the fact that two point releases also came out in the same time frame:

Now, because of those things and because we choose to stop work on 6.0
to build out 5.6 and 4.9, the 6.0 release is late.

Why do you snip the explanations and ignore the arguments contained in
the text you snipped? Why no mention of the time it took to get 3.1
(not 3.0) out the door? Why constantly cast CentOS in the darkest
possible light?

-- 
RonB -- Using CentOS 5.6
___
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@centos.org
http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos


Re: [CentOS] EL 6 rollout strategies? (Scientific Linux)

2011-05-16 Thread Johnny Hughes
On 05/16/2011 02:44 AM, Dag Wieers wrote:
 On Thu, 12 May 2011, Johnny Hughes wrote:
 
 On 05/12/2011 10:09 AM, Craig White wrote:
 On May 12, 2011, at 2:05 AM, Ron Blizzard wrote:
 On Thu, May 12, 2011 at 1:08 AM, Mark Bradbury mark.bradb...@gmail.com 
 wrote:

 Do you expect the C6.0 - C6.1 differences to be more complex, or less
 complex than the C5.5 - C5.6 differences ?

 And given that C5.6 took 3 months, are there any reasons why C6.1 would
 take no more than 1 month ?

 Get over yourself Dag ... for goodness sake.

 Why? seems like a valid point to me.

 But at that time there should only be one point release on the table,
 instead of two point releases and one major release. Is everyone
 forgetting that 4.9, 5.6 and 6.0 were all out at the same time?

 2 months elapsed from release of 6.0 before 5.6 and more than another month 
 before 4.9

 Hardly qualifies at the same time unless you consider 3 months to be 
 essentially the same time.

 The ZERO release is always going to take longer than the others.
 
 Past numbers debunks this myth:
 
  CentOS 4.0 took 23 days
 
  CentOS 5.0 took 28 days
 
  CentOS 6.0 is not released after 6 months.
 
 While eg.
 
  CentOS 4.8 took 3 months
 
  CentOS 5.6 took 3 months
 
 See also:
 
  http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CentOS
 

Yes, and I told you why that is ... upstream had good beta/rc programs
for those c4.0 and c5.0.  The releases were built entirely on the beta's
... the build environment was good.

For 3.0 and 6.0, we had to invent a new build system and had to host it
on a different OS.  They did not build it on the beta/rc.

It will be released when it is released, if you don't like it then leave.



signature.asc
Description: OpenPGP digital signature
___
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@centos.org
http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos


Re: [CentOS] EL 6 rollout strategies? (Scientific Linux)

2011-05-16 Thread John R. Dennison
On Mon, May 16, 2011 at 11:32:15AM +0200, Dag Wieers wrote:
 On Mon, 16 May 2011, Ron Blizzard wrote:
 
 Why constantly cast CentOS in the darkest possible light?
 
 I don't think that's what I am doing. I commended Johnny for his
 very quick CentOS 4.9 release, but I honestly can not praise a
 release that is 3 months or 6 months late (with no transparency to
 what is going on or how we could help).

You've been doing it for months.  It's getting quite old and tiresome.





John
-- 
I try to treat whoever I meet as an old friend. This gives me a genuine
feeling of happiness.  It is the practice of compassion.

-- His Holiness the XIV Dalai Lama, from Compassion and the Individual


pgppgdGIQ4pSl.pgp
Description: PGP signature
___
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@centos.org
http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos


Re: [CentOS] EL 6 rollout strategies? (Scientific Linux)

2011-05-16 Thread Johnny Hughes
On 05/16/2011 04:32 AM, Dag Wieers wrote:
 On Mon, 16 May 2011, Ron Blizzard wrote:
 
 On Mon, May 16, 2011 at 2:44 AM, Dag Wieers d...@wieers.com wrote:
 On Thu, 12 May 2011, Johnny Hughes wrote:

 The ZERO release is always going to take longer than the others.

 Past numbers debunks this myth:

 CentOS 4.0 took 23 days

 CentOS 5.0 took 28 days

 CentOS 6.0 is not released after 6 months.

 Why do you snip the explanations and ignore the arguments contained in
 the text you snipped? Why no mention of the time it took to get 3.1
 (not 3.0) out the door?
 
 CentOS 3.0 was not released because the project was still in its infancy
 (cAos project). I don't think it makes sense to even use it as a point
 of reference (unless maybe to argue for a direct CentOS 6.1 release).
 
 But that still makes Johnny's statement false by a large margin.
 
 The ZERO release is always going to take longer than the others.
 
 Also the whole explanation does not provide any reasoning why CentOS 5.6
 took 3 months. The QA team is not allowed to speak up or provide
 feedback, or they could loose their 'privilege'.

 Sure CentOS 6.0 is a different beast, but CentOS 6.0 was delayed in
 favor of CentOS 5.6. So again, why would CentOS 6.1 be released quicker
 if CentOS 5.6 has a well-known process and non of the issues Johnny was
 pointing at ?

This was mainly because we had to rewrite anaconda a bunch of times to
get the ISOs to build.  It was also because we kept finding issues in
QA.  (package A need to be rebuilt, which caused package B to be rebuilt).

We added in QA at the request of the Community ... and it helps.  It
also makes it take longer to get a release out.  That and, our
developers do this in their spare time.

Take a look at why samba says Samba4 is not out:

=
When will Samba 4.0.0 be released?

When it's ready. It's very hard to say when that will be. It depends on
a lot of things and people's spare time.
=

 My question was very specific though.


Your question is insulting and arrogant.  If you want to use CentOS,
then use it.  If you don't then take your arrogant whining somewhere else.

 
 Why constantly cast CentOS in the darkest possible light?
 
 I don't think that's what I am doing. I commended Johnny for his very
 quick CentOS 4.9 release, but I honestly can not praise a release that
 is 3 months or 6 months late (with no transparency to what is going on
 or how we could help).

You can't help ... we tried to let you help.  You don't want to help.
You want to stir the pot.  That you don't like the project is obvious.
Go away.

 
 But if anything brought up wouldn't be ignored or obfuscated, CentOS
 communication would be a lot more honest, and threads would be a lot
 shorter. It's because the discussion is being side-tracked that they are
 becoming larger and the essence is being repeated.
 
 There was a recent thread on centos-devel which clearly demonstrated
 this. It took a long thread and real worls examples for the CentOS
 developers to finally acknowledge there was a problem, and acknowledge
 it could be fixed for CentOS 6. This thread could be 4 posts long if the
 response wouldn't be defensive by default.

We want to produce a quality product.  We have been doing so for 7
years.  If it is not fast enough for you, then don't use it.

 
 (And just like this thread, I did not start it either and am hardly the
 largest contributor to the thread)





signature.asc
Description: OpenPGP digital signature
___
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@centos.org
http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos


Re: [CentOS] EL 6 rollout strategies? (Scientific Linux)

2011-05-16 Thread Johnny Hughes
On 05/15/2011 05:12 PM, Gordon Messmer wrote:
 The process around building CentOS has traditionally been very 
 secretive, which makes the name *Community* Enterprise OS seem very inapt.

The community in CentOS that you write about was NEVER about building
CentOS.

We have never said that anyone but the project would build it.

The community part is that we give it away for free and the community
helps each other use it.

That is what this list used to be for.  Before it turned into an
completely unusable pile of crap, where a few people whine the same
incessant demands, as if they are paying for something.

The community provided the QA team, they provide the answers to
bugs.centos.org, they provide the technical answers here.

That is what the community does, that is what their role in the process
is.  This is not new.  The project releases the distributions in our
spare time.  They are something that usually costs lots of money, but
you get them for free.  Because you get them for free, you help the
project by spending time answering e-mail on the lists or by looking at
the bugs and answering questions there.  Or by helping in the forums, etc.

That is not what we are seeing here. What we are seeing here is a small
group of people who think they are entitled to CentOS on their schedule
and not on ours.

Well, we make CentOS because we use it in production.  If you can also
use it in production, great.  If you can't use it, that is also great.

We are trying to provide more information on what is going on, but I
would say that we already provide more information than any other distro
out there.  Certainly any enterprise distro out there.




signature.asc
Description: OpenPGP digital signature
___
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@centos.org
http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos


Re: [CentOS] EL 6 rollout strategies? (Scientific Linux)

2011-05-16 Thread Brunner, Brian T.
 Can you take this off-list? I am REALLY tired of reading
 non-CentOS stuff.

Please keep it here.  CentOS vs SL and CentOS vs Ubuntu are as on-topic
as anything else.
Since TUV stopped supporting my non-PAE processors, I am obliged to find
a new home.
Ubuntu is one of the options.


Insert spiffy .sig here:
Life is complex: it has both real and imaginary parts.
Life is not measured by the number of breaths we take, but by the
moments that take our breath away. 


//me
***
This email and any files transmitted with it are confidential and
intended solely for the use of the individual or entity to whom
they are addressed. If you have received this email in error please
notify the system manager. This footnote also confirms that this
email message has been swept for the presence of computer viruses.
www.Hubbell.com - Hubbell Incorporated**

___
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@centos.org
http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos


Re: [CentOS] EL 6 rollout strategies? (Scientific Linux)

2011-05-16 Thread Christopher Chan
On Monday, May 16, 2011 09:11 PM, Brunner, Brian T. wrote:
 Can you take this off-list? I am REALLY tired of reading
 non-CentOS stuff.

 Please keep it here.  CentOS vs SL and CentOS vs Ubuntu are as on-topic
 as anything else.
 Since TUV stopped supporting my non-PAE processors, I am obliged to find
 a new home.
 Ubuntu is one of the options.


So long as it is legitimate dev/whatever bashing. So, shall I start with 
the 'LTS' 'maintenance', or the launchpad bug devs and chums system, or 
the Ubuntu community and 'community' aka Developers or the lists/irc/forums?

Ubuntu is however convenient as a desktop if you have Nvidia graphics 
but not everything on the desktop is going to be peachy. But for 
anything else...I dunno. I have this Ubuntu Hardy server but I sure 
don't like the fact that I have to program me own firewall rule scripts. 
And no, don't give me firestarter or ufw. If only I had a Centos disk 
when I had to build that server...
___
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@centos.org
http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos


Re: [CentOS] EL 6 rollout strategies? (Scientific Linux)

2011-05-16 Thread Les Mikesell
On 5/16/2011 5:05 AM, Johnny Hughes wrote:

 We have never said that anyone but the project would build it.

But you also didn't say that the project would lack the resources to do 
it in a timely manner or handle concurrent updates.  In fact, I thought 
the project used to post goals for timeliness instead of just 'whenever'.

 The community part is that we give it away for free and the community
 helps each other use it.

 That is what this list used to be for.

People know how to use 5.x by now.  I suspect we'd all rather be talking 
about how to use new features.

 Before it turned into an
 completely unusable pile of crap, where a few people whine the same
 incessant demands, as if they are paying for something.

You spoiled us with speed up until the 5.3 update.  We thought it was 
something we could count on...

 Well, we make CentOS because we use it in production.

And you don't have a use for 6.x?

 We are trying to provide more information on what is going on, but I
 would say that we already provide more information than any other distro
 out there.  Certainly any enterprise distro out there.

You mean things like:
http://release.debian.org/
http://bugs.debian.org/release-critical/
http://www.debian.org/devel/buildd/operation
https://buildd.debian.org/ (w/links to build logs)
https://buildd.debian.org/stats/

Doesn't leave much to post mailing list questions regarding status even 
if their release schedule is whenever...   I can sort-of see why 
commercial distros that want to hurt their competition would hide this 
kind of information, but what's the point for Centos?

-- 
   Les Mikesell
 lesmikes...@gmail.com
___
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@centos.org
http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos


Re: [CentOS] EL 6 rollout strategies? (Scientific Linux)

2011-05-16 Thread Craig White

On May 15, 2011, at 3:52 AM, Ron Blizzard wrote:

 You're leaving out release 4.9. You're also leaving out the fact that
 two major holidays occurred during the time *frame* that these three
 releases needed to be built. You're also leaving out the fact (as
 mentioned by one of the developers) that they had to start from
 scratch on 6.0 -- that they'll be set up for 6.1 when it comes out.
 You're also leaving out the fact that SL had to rebuild the same three
 releases -- and they're still working on the last of those -- so the
 amount of time it's taking CentOS developers squares with the amount
 of time required by the SL developers.

but you're leaving out a very important distinction - SL released all the 
updates so the lack of a 5.6 release by SL is merely the installer disc's which 
is significant only to people who are looking to install SL on hardware that is 
newly supported by 5.6 and not 5.5. Their updated 5.6 packages (and the 
packages of primary concern are the security updates) have been available for 
some time - sooner than CentOS 5.6 packages. I think the time factor squaring 
is relevant only when you use the milestone targets.

Craig
___
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@centos.org
http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos


Re: [CentOS] EL 6 rollout strategies? (Scientific Linux)

2011-05-16 Thread Les Mikesell
On 5/16/2011 11:11 AM, Craig White wrote:

 but you're leaving out a very important distinction - SL released all the 
 updates so the lack of a 5.6 release by SL is merely the installer disc's 
 which is significant only to people who are looking to install SL on hardware 
 that is newly supported by 5.6 and not 5.5. Their updated 5.6 packages (and 
 the packages of primary concern are the security updates) have been available 
 for some time - sooner than CentOS 5.6 packages. I think the time factor 
 squaring is relevant only when you use the milestone targets.

To be fair, there is another distinction in that the SL updates were 
more of a rolling release that may not have been built in an environment 
that matched upstream as precisely as the Centos version. But since we 
don't know the details of that environment it is hard to know whether to 
expect any practical differences as a result.  Without more to go on, my 
gut feeling is that I would have preferred security updates to not be 
delayed by problems building a new anaconda/installer - and that if yum 
can't deal with updating components in any order the distribution is 
inherently broken anyway.  As it happens, I think I have the main 
internet-exposed servers updated and the exploit attempts I was seeing 
were aimed at something fixed in 5.4 anyway - but I was still worried 
about things I might not have seen...

-- 
   Les Mikesell
lesmikes...@gmail.com
___
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@centos.org
http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos


Re: [CentOS] EL 6 rollout strategies? (Scientific Linux)

2011-05-16 Thread Johnny Hughes
On 05/16/2011 10:41 AM, Les Mikesell wrote:
 On 5/16/2011 5:05 AM, Johnny Hughes wrote:

 We have never said that anyone but the project would build it.
 
 But you also didn't say that the project would lack the resources to do 
 it in a timely manner or handle concurrent updates.  In fact, I thought 
 the project used to post goals for timeliness instead of just 'whenever'.
 
 The community part is that we give it away for free and the community
 helps each other use it.

 That is what this list used to be for.
 
 People know how to use 5.x by now.  I suspect we'd all rather be talking 
 about how to use new features.
 
 Before it turned into an
 completely unusable pile of crap, where a few people whine the same
 incessant demands, as if they are paying for something.
 
 You spoiled us with speed up until the 5.3 update.  We thought it was 
 something we could count on...
 
 Well, we make CentOS because we use it in production.
 
 And you don't have a use for 6.x?
 
 We are trying to provide more information on what is going on, but I
 would say that we already provide more information than any other distro
 out there.  Certainly any enterprise distro out there.
 
 You mean things like:
 http://release.debian.org/
 http://bugs.debian.org/release-critical/
 http://www.debian.org/devel/buildd/operation
 https://buildd.debian.org/ (w/links to build logs)
 https://buildd.debian.org/stats/
 
 Doesn't leave much to post mailing list questions regarding status even 
 if their release schedule is whenever...   I can sort-of see why 
 commercial distros that want to hurt their competition would hide this 
 kind of information, but what's the point for Centos?
 
The point is that we do not have a system built that can track that sort
of stuff ... and we can either build packages or design systems to track
stuff.

We are working on a new website design.

We opened up a new QAWeb.

We have an announce list.

As far as build logs are concerned, they reside on the build server ...
where we had people try to break into.  That machine is now hidden and
references to its name are also hidden.  We can't have people pounding
away against important servers ... there is no such thing as a
completely secure setup.  We therefore will not make our build machines
open to the public.



signature.asc
Description: OpenPGP digital signature
___
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@centos.org
http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos


Re: [CentOS] EL 6 rollout strategies? (Scientific Linux)

2011-05-16 Thread Les Mikesell
On 5/16/2011 12:27 PM, Johnny Hughes wrote:

 The point is that we do not have a system built that can track that sort
 of stuff ... and we can either build packages or design systems to track
 stuff.

You don't really have to design a system for build automation/tracking 
since there are several free ones available.  Of course there is a 
tradeoff in terms of how quickly the automation would win back the time 
it takes to configure it.

 We are working on a new website design.

 We opened up a new QAWeb.

 We have an announce list.

All great, and much appreciated, particularly compared to previous 
postings that implied that nothing needed to change or was ever going 
to.  Still, I don't see how these help with the underlying issue of 
resources unless the bottleneck is in post-build QA.

 As far as build logs are concerned, they reside on the build server ...
 where we had people try to break into.  That machine is now hidden and
 references to its name are also hidden.  We can't have people pounding
 away against important servers ... there is no such thing as a
 completely secure setup.  We therefore will not make our build machines
 open to the public.

Agreed on the security comment, hence the concern about timely updates. 
  It is pretty much a given that any public site will be hit with all 
known exploit attempts, but it is somewhat unsettling to think that the 
project itself considers that to be a problem.  But, most of both the 
'pounding' and security issues can be handled with a simple caching 
reverse-proxy server easily configured in squid/apache/nginx, etc..  And 
with build automation frameworks like jenkins/hudson, the results and 
logs are collated on a central server that mostly does scheduling, not 
the actual work: http://ci.jenkins-ci.org/builds.

-- 
   Les Mikesell
lesmikes...@gmail.com
___
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@centos.org
http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos


Re: [CentOS] EL 6 rollout strategies? (Scientific Linux)

2011-05-16 Thread John R Pierce
On 05/16/11 11:24 AM, Les Mikesell wrote:
 it is somewhat unsettling to think that the
 project itself considers that to be a problem.

consider what might happen if a core build server for a project as 
widely used as centos gets penetrated and carefully targetted to slip 
trojans unnoticed into the final product  this woudl be a holy grail 
to the sort of international espionage that is taking place today.

be scared, be very scared.

-- 
john r pierceN 37, W 123
santa cruz ca mid-left coast

___
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@centos.org
http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos


Re: [CentOS] EL 6 rollout strategies? (Scientific Linux)

2011-05-16 Thread Johnny Hughes
On 05/16/2011 01:24 PM, Les Mikesell wrote:
 On 5/16/2011 12:27 PM, Johnny Hughes wrote:

 The point is that we do not have a system built that can track that sort
 of stuff ... and we can either build packages or design systems to track
 stuff.
 
 You don't really have to design a system for build automation/tracking 
 since there are several free ones available.  Of course there is a 
 tradeoff in terms of how quickly the automation would win back the time 
 it takes to configure it.
 
 We are working on a new website design.

 We opened up a new QAWeb.

 We have an announce list.
 
 All great, and much appreciated, particularly compared to previous 
 postings that implied that nothing needed to change or was ever going 
 to.  Still, I don't see how these help with the underlying issue of 
 resources unless the bottleneck is in post-build QA.
 
 As far as build logs are concerned, they reside on the build server ...
 where we had people try to break into.  That machine is now hidden and
 references to its name are also hidden.  We can't have people pounding
 away against important servers ... there is no such thing as a
 completely secure setup.  We therefore will not make our build machines
 open to the public.
 
 Agreed on the security comment, hence the concern about timely updates. 
   It is pretty much a given that any public site will be hit with all 
 known exploit attempts, but it is somewhat unsettling to think that the 
 project itself considers that to be a problem.  But, most of both the 
 'pounding' and security issues can be handled with a simple caching 
 reverse-proxy server easily configured in squid/apache/nginx, etc..  And 
 with build automation frameworks like jenkins/hudson, the results and 
 logs are collated on a central server that mostly does scheduling, not 
 the actual work: http://ci.jenkins-ci.org/builds.
 
Wonderful except it is a build server ... and certain things need to
function without a proxy.

It doesn't matter though, because regardless of what I do, it is not
enough for you.

I am already busting my ass to give a $2500.00 piece of software to you
for free, to use as many times as you want to ... saving you as much
money as $2500.00 x number_you_run

Now, not only do I need to bust my ass to provide it to you for free,
but I also need to do other things for you to.  I need to provide you
access to stuff and I need to track things in a different way and I need
to setup elaborate systems.  AND, I need to tell you exactly how I build
it too.

Can't you ungrateful bastards take the free software I make by following
the licensing requirements and be happy with that?



signature.asc
Description: OpenPGP digital signature
___
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@centos.org
http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos


Re: [CentOS] EL 6 rollout strategies? (Scientific Linux)

2011-05-16 Thread Scott Silva
on 5/16/2011 11:47 AM Johnny Hughes spake the following:

 Can't you ungrateful bastards take the free software I make by following
 the licensing requirements and be happy with that?
I hear ya Johnny... The only hurry I am in over 6 getting out is that FINALLY
some of the whining will stop... For a little while... I saw the same sort of
complaints at Whitebox, and it will never stop...

I hope you don't just get fed up with the bitching and stop the project...

No need to respond... Just go on doing what you need to do...

___
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@centos.org
http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos


Re: [CentOS] EL 6 rollout strategies? (Scientific Linux)

2011-05-16 Thread Les Mikesell
On 5/16/2011 1:47 PM, Johnny Hughes wrote:


 Agreed on the security comment, hence the concern about timely updates.
It is pretty much a given that any public site will be hit with all
 known exploit attempts, but it is somewhat unsettling to think that the
 project itself considers that to be a problem.  But, most of both the
 'pounding' and security issues can be handled with a simple caching
 reverse-proxy server easily configured in squid/apache/nginx, etc..  And
 with build automation frameworks like jenkins/hudson, the results and
 logs are collated on a central server that mostly does scheduling, not
 the actual work: http://ci.jenkins-ci.org/builds.

 Wonderful except it is a build server ... and certain things need to
 function without a proxy.

That's not a particular problem.  You can have a public reverse-proxy 
that knows how to access a subset of an otherwise firewalled or 
certificate-requiring site without affecting the other ways you can 
access the source side directly.

 It doesn't matter though, because regardless of what I do, it is not
 enough for you.

 I am already busting my ass to give a $2500.00 piece of software to you
 for free, to use as many times as you want to ... saving you as much
 money as $2500.00 xnumber_you_run

 Now, not only do I need to bust my ass to provide it to you for free,
 but I also need to do other things for you to.  I need to provide you
 access to stuff and I need to track things in a different way and I need
 to setup elaborate systems.  AND, I need to tell you exactly how I build
 it too.

You are completely missing the point here, which is not to beat you up 
for not doing better with limited resources.  I believe that by making 
the process and its problems public, someone will help solve those 
problems as they do in many, many other projects where the work is open. 
  That both reduces the need for you to bust your ass and speeds up the 
availability for everyone else.  You may not agree that this would 
happen and of course it is your call, but please don't mischaracterize a 
suggestion that has been shown to work elsewhere as a personal demand 
for anything.

  Can't you ungrateful bastards take the free software I make by following
  the licensing requirements and be happy with that?

If you could look at this objectively from a user's side, would you be 
happy with a timeframe rounding up to a year?

-- 
   Les Mikesell
lesmikes...@gmail.com
___
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@centos.org
http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos


Re: [CentOS] EL 6 rollout strategies? (Scientific Linux)

2011-05-16 Thread Les Mikesell
On 5/16/2011 1:43 PM, John R Pierce wrote:
 On 05/16/11 11:24 AM, Les Mikesell wrote:
 it is somewhat unsettling to think that the
 project itself considers that to be a problem.

 consider what might happen if a core build server for a project as
 widely used as centos gets penetrated and carefully targetted to slip
 trojans unnoticed into the final product  this woudl be a holy grail
 to the sort of international espionage that is taking place today.

 be scared, be very scared.

Yes, but assuming they eat their own dog food and are running the same 
thing we are, if their servers are penetrated, yours will too even 
before whatever they are building ships.  And it is something that 
debian seems to be able to handle.  In any case, with full automation it 
would be easy enough to duplicate the final build on a trusted server 
and compare the results before distribution.  Or for someone else to do 
it to verify from an outside perspective.

-- 
   Les Mikesell
lesmikes...@gmail.com
___
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@centos.org
http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos


Re: [CentOS] EL 6 rollout strategies? (Scientific Linux)

2011-05-16 Thread John R Pierce
On 05/16/11 12:38 PM, Les Mikesell wrote:
 I believe that by making
 the process and its problems public, someone will help solve those
 problems as they do in many, many other projects where the work is open.

a very wise man[1] once said adding more bodies to a late project just 
makes it later.   9 women can't make a baby in 1 month.

this is NOT a software development project, where pieces of it can be 
torn off and worked on independently, then later integrated.   this is a 
software build-and-integrate project where all the pieces have to be fit 
together and the bulk of the hard work is reverse engineering and 
recreating the correct build environment.



[1]  Fredrick P. Brooks, The Mythical Man-Month, 1975.36 years 
later, this book's fundamental premises are just as valid.

-- 
john r pierceN 37, W 123
santa cruz ca mid-left coast

___
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@centos.org
http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos


Re: [CentOS] EL 6 rollout strategies? (Scientific Linux)

2011-05-16 Thread Johnny Hughes
On 05/16/2011 02:46 PM, Les Mikesell wrote:
 On 5/16/2011 1:43 PM, John R Pierce wrote:
 On 05/16/11 11:24 AM, Les Mikesell wrote:
 it is somewhat unsettling to think that the
 project itself considers that to be a problem.

 consider what might happen if a core build server for a project as
 widely used as centos gets penetrated and carefully targetted to slip
 trojans unnoticed into the final product  this woudl be a holy grail
 to the sort of international espionage that is taking place today.

 be scared, be very scared.
 
 Yes, but assuming they eat their own dog food and are running the same 
 thing we are, if their servers are penetrated, yours will too even 
 before whatever they are building ships.  And it is something that 
 debian seems to be able to handle.  In any case, with full automation it 
 would be easy enough to duplicate the final build on a trusted server 
 and compare the results before distribution.  Or for someone else to do 
 it to verify from an outside perspective.
 
There is not a server in the world that I could not break into if I was
on the same subnet ... and I am not even that smart.



signature.asc
Description: OpenPGP digital signature
___
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@centos.org
http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos


Re: [CentOS] EL 6 rollout strategies? (Scientific Linux)

2011-05-16 Thread Les Mikesell
On 5/16/2011 2:52 PM, John R Pierce wrote:
 On 05/16/11 12:38 PM, Les Mikesell wrote:
 I believe that by making
 the process and its problems public, someone will help solve those
 problems as they do in many, many other projects where the work is open.

 a very wise man[1] once said adding more bodies to a late project just
 makes it later.   9 women can't make a baby in 1 month.

If we were talking about a month, well probably no one would be talking...

 this is NOT a software development project, where pieces of it can be
 torn off and worked on independently, then later integrated.

And yet, there were 3 completely unrelated paths where only one had 
progress at a time.  Or so we've been told.  And that's not exactly a 
surprising situation even though they may not coincide frequently.

 this is a
 software build-and-integrate project where all the pieces have to be fit
 together and the bulk of the hard work is reverse engineering and
 recreating the correct build environment.

Yes, but whatever can't be automated here should benefit from doing the 
trial-and-error in parallel.   And the potential improvements might come 
in the automation process as much as the grunge work - you can't really 
predict how an open project will develop.

 [1]  Fredrick P. Brooks, The Mythical Man-Month, 1975.36 years
 later, this book's fundamental premises are just as valid.

I wonder what he would have said about google's approach to, say, 
translation or voice recognition where the results depend on 
availability of massive amounts of input as much as anything else.

-- 
   Les Mikesell
lesmikes...@gmail.com

___
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@centos.org
http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos


Re: [CentOS] EL 6 rollout strategies? (Scientific Linux)

2011-05-16 Thread Nicolas Thierry-Mieg
Johnny Hughes wrote:
 There is not a server in the world that I could not break into if I was
 on the same subnet ... and I am not even that smart.

maybe but you have the distinct advantage of having your private trojans 
in every centos system out there ;-)
___
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@centos.org
http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos


Re: [CentOS] EL 6 rollout strategies? (Scientific Linux)

2011-05-16 Thread Janne TH. Nyman
Who cares? I find it amazing that these guys still keep on building and
providing considering how their users treat them.

Team CentOS, keep your heads up. For me, you are still the best thing
that happened since sliced bread.

Come on, community, where is your love?

My 2 pence,

Janne Janski AKA JNixus Nyman
Founder of Newman IT Solutions Ltd


-Original Message-
From: centos-requ...@centos.org
Reply-to: centos@centos.org
To: centos@centos.org
Subject: CentOS Digest, Vol 76, Issue 16
Date: Mon, 16 May 2011 12:00:02 -0400

Re: [CentOS] EL 6 rollout strategies? (Scientific Linux)

___
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@centos.org
http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos


Re: [CentOS] EL 6 rollout strategies? (Scientific Linux)

2011-05-16 Thread Louis Lagendijk
On Mon, 2011-05-16 at 19:40 +0100, Janne TH. Nyman wrote:
 Who cares? I find it amazing that these guys still keep on building and
 providing considering how their users treat them.
 
 Team CentOS, keep your heads up. For me, you are still the best thing
 that happened since sliced bread.
 
 Come on, community, where is your love?
 
 My 2 pence,
 
 Janne Janski AKA JNixus Nyman
 Founder of Newman IT Solutions Ltd
 
+1


___
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@centos.org
http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos


Re: [CentOS] EL 6 rollout strategies? (Scientific Linux)

2011-05-16 Thread John R Pierce
On 05/16/11 1:18 PM, Les Mikesell wrote:
 Yes, but whatever can't be automated here should benefit from doing the
 trial-and-error in parallel.   And the potential improvements might come
 in the automation process as much as the grunge work - you can't really
 predict how an open project will develop.

so you are volunteering to take over 4.next or 5.x or whatever when the 
time comes ?  you can come up with the build infrastructure and develop 
this automation in the meantime?  I'd suggest starting with recreating 
5.6 by working from 5.5 and the RHEL 5,6 SRPMs exclusively.  let us know 
how long it takes from scratch, ok?   you don't mind that 
we-the-community would want our packagers vetted by demonstrating the 
ability to deliver...  consider this a test run.


-- 
john r pierceN 37, W 123
santa cruz ca mid-left coast

___
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@centos.org
http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos


Re: [CentOS] EL 6 rollout strategies? (Scientific Linux)

2011-05-16 Thread Les Mikesell
On 5/16/2011 3:38 PM, John R Pierce wrote:
 On 05/16/11 1:18 PM, Les Mikesell wrote:
 Yes, but whatever can't be automated here should benefit from doing the
 trial-and-error in parallel.   And the potential improvements might come
 in the automation process as much as the grunge work - you can't really
 predict how an open project will develop.

 so you are volunteering to take over 4.next or 5.x or whatever when the
 time comes ?  you can come up with the build infrastructure and develop
 this automation in the meantime?  I'd suggest starting with recreating
 5.6 by working from 5.5 and the RHEL 5,6 SRPMs exclusively.  let us know
 how long it takes from scratch, ok?   you don't mind that
 we-the-community would want our packagers vetted by demonstrating the
 ability to deliver...  consider this a test run.

No, but I'm not the only member of the public.  And your suggestion of 
starting by reproducing someone else's work from scratch instead of 
building on it would be like Linus telling everyone to just write their 
own unix-like kernel before trying to add to it.  If he had done that 
instead of letting others build on the existing work we wouldn't be 
talking about usable Linux distributions today at all.

-- 
   Les Mikesell
lesmikes...@gmail.com

___
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@centos.org
http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos


Re: [CentOS] EL 6 rollout strategies? (Scientific Linux)

2011-05-16 Thread Ron Blizzard
On Mon, May 16, 2011 at 3:18 PM, Les Mikesell lesmikes...@gmail.com wrote:

 Yes, but whatever can't be automated here should benefit from doing the
 trial-and-error in parallel.   And the potential improvements might come
 in the automation process as much as the grunge work - you can't really
 predict how an open project will develop.

You know Les, you're talking in hypotheticals. Johnny and the other
CentOS developers are actually *doing* the work. Everything is easy
when you're not actually doing it. If you know so much about *how* it
should be done, why don't you and your like-minded friends start your
own rebuild project? That would give you something else to do rather
than sniping from the sidelines here.

-- 
RonB -- Using CentOS 5.6
___
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@centos.org
http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos


Re: [CentOS] EL 6 rollout strategies? (Scientific Linux)

2011-05-16 Thread Ron Blizzard
On Mon, May 16, 2011 at 1:40 PM, Janne TH. Nyman jny...@jbtec.org wrote:
 Who cares? I find it amazing that these guys still keep on building and
 providing considering how their users treat them.

 Team CentOS, keep your heads up. For me, you are still the best thing
 that happened since sliced bread.

 Come on, community, where is your love?

 My 2 pence,

Hopefully, deep down, the CentOS developers know that it's the same
few whiners over and over and over and over again... like broken
records. They've got it in their mind that they know so much better
how it *should* be done. Armchair quarterbacks always *know* better.

At any rate, +1.

-- 
RonB -- Using CentOS 5.6
___
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@centos.org
http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos


Re: [CentOS] EL 6 rollout strategies? (Scientific Linux)

2011-05-16 Thread Brian Mathis
On Mon, May 16, 2011 at 2:40 PM, Janne TH. Nyman jny...@jbtec.org wrote:
 Who cares? I find it amazing that these guys still keep on building and
 providing considering how their users treat them.

 Team CentOS, keep your heads up. For me, you are still the best thing
 that happened since sliced bread.

 Come on, community, where is your love?

 My 2 pence,

 Janne Janski AKA JNixus Nyman
 Founder of Newman IT Solutions Ltd


These kind of ass-kissing posts are even worse than the flame wars.
The flame wars at least usually start with some sort of reasonable
criticism of the project, and have the *potential* to result in a
discussion that ultimately improves the project.  Ass kissing never
has the potential to improve the project.

Flame wars only start once Johnny or some sycophant tells everyone to
fuck off, thereby derailing any potential for a constructive
discussion.  At that point you're left with lots of very smart, very
angry people who feel like they wasted their time promoting and using
CentOS.


// Brian Mathis
___
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@centos.org
http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos


Re: [CentOS] EL 6 rollout strategies? (Scientific Linux)

2011-05-16 Thread Ron Blizzard
On Mon, May 16, 2011 at 3:50 PM, Les Mikesell lesmikes...@gmail.com wrote:

 No, but I'm not the only member of the public.  And your suggestion of
 starting by reproducing someone else's work from scratch instead of
 building on it would be like Linus telling everyone to just write their
 own unix-like kernel before trying to add to it.  If he had done that
 instead of letting others build on the existing work we wouldn't be
 talking about usable Linux distributions today at all.

And yet that's what the CentOS developers originally had to do (and
apparently had to do all over again with 6.0). So a little respect and
gratitude would be in order, don't you think?

-- 
RonB -- Using CentOS 5.6
___
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@centos.org
http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos


Re: [CentOS] EL 6 rollout strategies? (Scientific Linux)

2011-05-16 Thread Radu Gheorghiu
On 05/16/2011 11:50 PM, Les Mikesell wrote:
 On 5/16/2011 3:38 PM, John R Pierce wrote:
 On 05/16/11 1:18 PM, Les Mikesell wrote:
 Yes, but whatever can't be automated here should benefit from doing the
 trial-and-error in parallel.   And the potential improvements might come
 in the automation process as much as the grunge work - you can't really
 predict how an open project will develop.
 so you are volunteering to take over 4.next or 5.x or whatever when the
 time comes ?  you can come up with the build infrastructure and develop
 this automation in the meantime?  I'd suggest starting with recreating
 5.6 by working from 5.5 and the RHEL 5,6 SRPMs exclusively.  let us know
 how long it takes from scratch, ok?   you don't mind that
 we-the-community would want our packagers vetted by demonstrating the
 ability to deliver...  consider this a test run.
 No, but I'm not the only member of the public.  And your suggestion of
 starting by reproducing someone else's work from scratch instead of
 building on it would be like Linus telling everyone to just write their
 own unix-like kernel before trying to add to it.  If he had done that
 instead of letting others build on the existing work we wouldn't be
 talking about usable Linux distributions today at all.

The main fear the developers have is that somebody could steal their 
work and come up with
another RHEL clone easily if they release their build system  scripts. 
I think this is obvious by now.
It is also pretty obvious that the developers have a strong hope that by 
keeping CentOS closed,
somebody will notice their skills and will pay them a fortune for their 
knowledge by hiring them.
This is my opinion and it is based on what I read on this list during 
the last months.
___
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@centos.org
http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos


Re: [CentOS] EL 6 rollout strategies? (Scientific Linux)

2011-05-16 Thread John R Pierce
On 05/16/11 1:51 PM, Ron Blizzard wrote:
 On Mon, May 16, 2011 at 3:18 PM, Les Mikeselllesmikes...@gmail.com  wrote:

 Yes, but whatever can't be automated here should benefit from doing the
 trial-and-error in parallel.   And the potential improvements might come
 in the automation process as much as the grunge work - you can't really
 predict how an open project will develop.
 You know Les, you're talking in hypotheticals. Johnny and the other
 CentOS developers are actually *doing* the work. Everything is easy
 when you're not actually doing it. If you know so much about *how* it
 should be done, why don't you and your like-minded friends start your
 own rebuild project? That would give you something else to do rather
 than sniping from the sidelines here.


no, no.  he wants someone ELSE to do that.   see his last response to me.

i'm done with this thread. ker-flush


-- 
john r pierceN 37, W 123
santa cruz ca mid-left coast

___
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@centos.org
http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos


Re: [CentOS] EL 6 rollout strategies? (Scientific Linux)

2011-05-16 Thread John R. Dennison
On Mon, May 16, 2011 at 03:51:22PM -0500, Ron Blizzard wrote:
 
 You know Les, you're talking in hypotheticals. Johnny and the other
 CentOS developers are actually *doing* the work. Everything is easy
 when you're not actually doing it. If you know so much about *how* it
 should be done, why don't you and your like-minded friends start your
 own rebuild project? That would give you something else to do rather
 than sniping from the sidelines here.

+1000




John
-- 
Live a good life.  If there are gods and they are just, they will not care
how devout you have been, but will welcome you based on the virtues you
have lived by.  If there are gods, but unjust, then you should not want to
worship them.  If there are no gods, then you will be gone, but will have
lived a noble life that will live on in the memories of your loved ones.

-- Marcus Aurelius (121-180), philosopher and writer


pgpOA6jxnz3Jm.pgp
Description: PGP signature
___
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@centos.org
http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos


Re: [CentOS] EL 6 rollout strategies? (Scientific Linux)

2011-05-16 Thread Craig White

On May 16, 2011, at 11:47 AM, Johnny Hughes wrote:

 Now, not only do I need to bust my ass to provide it to you for free,
 but I also need to do other things for you to.  I need to provide you
 access to stuff and I need to track things in a different way and I need
 to setup elaborate systems.  AND, I need to tell you exactly how I build
 it too.
 
 Can't you ungrateful bastards take the free software I make by following
 the licensing requirements and be happy with that?


can't say that in all the years I've been using FOSS/Linux that I've ever seen 
the maintainers have such open disdain for their users. Clearly they have 
gotten a massive code base for free and though the cost of assembling it into a 
redistributable system is not inconsequential, it's clear that if this attitude 
was prevalent, we wouldn't have the massive code base available as it were.

Craig
___
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@centos.org
http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos


Re: [CentOS] EL 6 rollout strategies? (Scientific Linux)

2011-05-16 Thread Ron Blizzard
On Mon, May 16, 2011 at 3:59 PM, Brian Mathis

 These kind of ass-kissing posts are even worse than the flame wars.
 The flame wars at least usually start with some sort of reasonable
 criticism of the project, and have the *potential* to result in a
 discussion that ultimately improves the project.  Ass kissing never
 has the potential to improve the project.

 Flame wars only start once Johnny or some sycophant tells everyone to
 fuck off, thereby derailing any potential for a constructive
 discussion.  At that point you're left with lots of very smart, very
 angry people who feel like they wasted their time promoting and using
 CentOS.

Give me a break. Any human being, who's been working his ass off for
nearly seven months to get out three separate releases of CentOS,
would lose patience when all that comes from the sidelines is the
constant drip, drip, drip of unending whining from a few
repeat-o-matic cranks. I've basically ignored this mailing list for
months because of it -- and have just recently come back to read it,
and I'm already fed up with it. How the developers have put up with it
for months, I have no idea.

And, as for ass-kissing (as you so politely put it), I use and
*like* CentOS and am grateful for all the work the developers put into
it. And, especially since the ungrateful whiners can only bitch and
bitch and bitch, I think every now and then the developers need to
hear that there are those who appreciate their work.

As I've told Les, if you know so much better how to do this, why don't
you rebuild your own Red Hat distribution? So much easier to do it
when you're not actually doing it, isn't it?

-- 
RonB -- Using CentOS 5.6
___
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@centos.org
http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos


Re: [CentOS] EL 6 rollout strategies? (Scientific Linux)

2011-05-16 Thread John R. Dennison
On Mon, May 16, 2011 at 04:59:42PM -0400, Brian Mathis wrote:

 Flame wars only start once Johnny or some sycophant tells everyone to
 fuck off, thereby derailing any potential for a constructive
 discussion.  At that point you're left with lots of very smart, very
 angry people who feel like they wasted their time promoting and using
 CentOS.

If they were so smart they'd roll up their sleeves and do it themselves.
If they were so smart you'd think that in all the time they've spent
bitching about things they would have been able to churn out a rebuild
on their own.

Additionally if they were so angry they'd spend some time looking into
alternatives.  The same crybabies are still here.

The chances of a constructive discussion pretty much went away months
ago; the signal/noise ratio on this list has gone from quite good to
effectively white-noise over the past few months with the constant crap
from the same few loudmouths.





John
-- 
An education isn't how much you have committed to memory, or even how much
you know.  It's being able to differentiate between what you do know and
what you don't.  It's knowing where to go to find out what you need to
know; and it's knowing how to use the information you get.

-- Anatole France (1844-1924), member of the French Academy, 1921 Nobel
   Laureate in Literature


pgpeYVNDlBGhb.pgp
Description: PGP signature
___
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@centos.org
http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos


Re: [CentOS] EL 6 rollout strategies? (Scientific Linux)

2011-05-16 Thread Ron Blizzard
On Mon, May 16, 2011 at 4:00 PM, Radu Gheorghiu r...@pengooin.net wrote:

 The main fear the developers have is that somebody could steal their
 work and come up with
 another RHEL clone easily if they release their build system  scripts.
 I think this is obvious by now.
 It is also pretty obvious that the developers have a strong hope that by
 keeping CentOS closed,
 somebody will notice their skills and will pay them a fortune for their
 knowledge by hiring them.
 This is my opinion and it is based on what I read on this list during
 the last months.

What a load of undiluted crap. They've been doing this for over seven
years. But nothing is stopping you from starting your own Red Hat
rebuild project. You *know* so much better how it *should* be done.
Enlighten us. Actually do it.

-- 
RonB -- Using CentOS 5.6
___
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@centos.org
http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos


Re: [CentOS] EL 6 rollout strategies? (Scientific Linux)

2011-05-16 Thread Johnny Hughes
On 05/16/2011 04:10 PM, Craig White wrote:
 
 On May 16, 2011, at 11:47 AM, Johnny Hughes wrote:
 
 Now, not only do I need to bust my ass to provide it to you for free,
 but I also need to do other things for you to.  I need to provide you
 access to stuff and I need to track things in a different way and I need
 to setup elaborate systems.  AND, I need to tell you exactly how I build
 it too.

 Can't you ungrateful bastards take the free software I make by following
 the licensing requirements and be happy with that?
 
 
 can't say that in all the years I've been using FOSS/Linux that I've ever 
 seen the maintainers have such open disdain for their users. Clearly they 
 have gotten a massive code base for free and though the cost of assembling it 
 into a redistributable system is not inconsequential, it's clear that if this 
 attitude was prevalent, we wouldn't have the massive code base available as 
 it were.

And yet, we do have the massive code base.  And Red Hat did not have to
publish their build system, their build logs, their hidden dependencies,
or anything else.  All the had to do was follow the GPL.

CentOS also publishes all our changes and follows the GPL.  We publish
build scripts and other things that Red Hat would never publish.  And I
am the bad guy.  Really?




signature.asc
Description: OpenPGP digital signature
___
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@centos.org
http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos


Re: [CentOS] EL 6 rollout strategies? (Scientific Linux)

2011-05-16 Thread John R. Dennison
On Mon, May 16, 2011 at 02:10:28PM -0700, Craig White wrote:
 
 can't say that in all the years I've been using FOSS/Linux that I've
 ever seen the maintainers have such open disdain for their users.

You're missing the point.  The disdain, if that's truly what Johnny is
feeling, is only directed at a teeny tiny inconsequential portion of
the of the user base.  This would be the leeches that do nothing but
bitch about those providing the free gravy that they use in their
businesses but yet give absolutely nothing back in terms of tangible
work or effort.

Besides, that imaginary shackle you have around your ankle keeping you
(used collectively) here isn't locked; you're free to find alternatives.




John
-- 
Life is like a game of cards.  The hand that is dealt you represents
determinism; the way you play it is free will.

-- Jawaharlal Nehru


pgp0u3Bqtivzl.pgp
Description: PGP signature
___
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@centos.org
http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos


Re: [CentOS] EL 6 rollout strategies? (Scientific Linux)

2011-05-16 Thread Ron Blizzard
On Mon, May 16, 2011 at 4:10 PM, Craig White craig.wh...@ttiltd.com wrote:

 can't say that in all the years I've been using FOSS/Linux that I've ever 
 seen the maintainers have such open disdain for their users. Clearly they 
 have gotten a massive code base for free and though the cost of assembling 
 it into a redistributable system is not inconsequential, it's clear that if 
 this attitude was prevalent, we wouldn't have the massive code base 
 available as it were. 

Disdain for users? You mean disgust for constant whiners, don't
you? Strange to say, I share the developers disdain.

-- 
RonB -- Using CentOS 5.6
___
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@centos.org
http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos


Re: [CentOS] EL 6 rollout strategies? (Scientific Linux)

2011-05-16 Thread Scott Silva
on 5/16/2011 11:40 AM Janne TH. Nyman spake the following:
 Who cares? I find it amazing that these guys still keep on building and
 providing considering how their users treat them.
 
 Team CentOS, keep your heads up. For me, you are still the best thing
 that happened since sliced bread.
 
I always wondered what was the best thing BEFORE sliced bread... LOL

___
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@centos.org
http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos


Re: [CentOS] EL 6 rollout strategies? (Scientific Linux)

2011-05-16 Thread Radu Gheorghiu
On 05/17/2011 12:15 AM, Ron Blizzard wrote:
 On Mon, May 16, 2011 at 4:00 PM, Radu Gheorghiur...@pengooin.net  wrote:

 The main fear the developers have is that somebody could steal their
 work and come up with
 another RHEL clone easily if they release their build system  scripts.
 I think this is obvious by now.
 It is also pretty obvious that the developers have a strong hope that by
 keeping CentOS closed,
 somebody will notice their skills and will pay them a fortune for their
 knowledge by hiring them.
 This is my opinion and it is based on what I read on this list during
 the last months.
 What a load of undiluted crap.
Please keep this for yourself.
 They've been doing this for over seven
 years. But nothing is stopping you from starting your own Red Hat
 rebuild project. You *know* so much better how it *should* be done.
 Enlighten us. Actually do it.
I never said I want to do it. I only said what the devs are obviously doing.
Maybe 7+ years is too much waiting for somebody to come and fill their 
pockets.

___
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@centos.org
http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos


Re: [CentOS] EL 6 rollout strategies? (Scientific Linux)

2011-05-16 Thread nemus
 on 5/16/2011 11:40 AM Janne TH. Nyman spake the following:
 Who cares? I find it amazing that these guys still keep on building and
 providing considering how their users treat them.

 Team CentOS, keep your heads up. For me, you are still the best thing
 that happened since sliced bread.

 I always wondered what was the best thing BEFORE sliced bread... LOL

 ___
 CentOS mailing list
 CentOS@centos.org
 http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos

I never thought sliced bread was all that great.

Wouldn't it be better for people to donate money to help push things along
faster?

I mean if your really upset about how long its taken to come out why don't
you donate some money to help the people who are working for free?

IDK just my two cents.

___
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@centos.org
http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos


Re: [CentOS] EL 6 rollout strategies? (Scientific Linux)

2011-05-16 Thread centos
On Mon, 16 May 2011 13:47:30 -0500
Johnny Hughes joh...@centos.org wrote:

 Can't you ungrateful bastards take the free software I make by
 following the licensing requirements and be happy with that?

Johnny please don't take this personally. I don't know who came with
the expression:

When you fight with a pig, you both get dirty - but the pig likes it

They like it and your blood pressure rise. Not worth it. Don't listen
to them.

PS. I'm one of the silent majority! I run a few v4 and v5. Thanks for
the hard work.

-- 
Thanks
http://www.911networks.com
When the network has to work
___
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@centos.org
http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos


Re: [CentOS] EL 6 rollout strategies? (Scientific Linux)

2011-05-16 Thread Brian Mathis
On Mon, May 16, 2011 at 5:11 PM, Ron Blizzard rb4cen...@gmail.com wrote:
 On Mon, May 16, 2011 at 3:59 PM, Brian Mathis
 These kind of ass-kissing posts are even worse than the flame wars.
 The flame wars at least usually start with some sort of reasonable
 criticism of the project, and have the *potential* to result in a
 discussion that ultimately improves the project.  Ass kissing never
 has the potential to improve the project.

 Flame wars only start once Johnny or some sycophant tells everyone to
 fuck off, thereby derailing any potential for a constructive
 discussion.  At that point you're left with lots of very smart, very
 angry people who feel like they wasted their time promoting and using
 CentOS.

 Give me a break. Any human being, who's been working his ass off for
 nearly seven months to get out three separate releases of CentOS,
 would lose patience when all that comes from the sidelines is the
 constant drip, drip, drip of unending whining from a few
 repeat-o-matic cranks. I've basically ignored this mailing list for
 months because of it -- and have just recently come back to read it,
 and I'm already fed up with it. How the developers have put up with it
 for months, I have no idea.

 And, as for ass-kissing (as you so politely put it), I use and
 *like* CentOS and am grateful for all the work the developers put into
 it. And, especially since the ungrateful whiners can only bitch and
 bitch and bitch, I think every now and then the developers need to
 hear that there are those who appreciate their work.

 As I've told Les, if you know so much better how to do this, why don't
 you rebuild your own Red Hat distribution? So much easier to do it
 when you're not actually doing it, isn't it?

 --
 RonB -- Using CentOS 5.6


The constant drip drip drip, as you put it, is generated from the
disrespect shown to the users, not the other way around.  Anyone who
asks how much longer or how they can help is immediately slapped down
and told to go away.

The understanding that's missing from the Devs and sycophants is that
users are asking BECAUSE THEY CARE.  BECAUSE THEY LIKE THE PROJECT.
BECAUSE THEY UNDERSTAND THAT THIS IS A LOT OF WORK.  And their concern
is met with nothing but derision and accusations of being constant
freeloading whiners.

As for appreciating the developers, that is what all of the posts
complaining about the process are about.  People complain they can't
help.  People complain they can't do anything.  People complain that
when they ask, they are shut out instead of welcomed in.  All of this
comes from a desire to help the project.

The sycophants simply unable to have any real discussion.  Those with
criticisms have valid ones, but the responses do not actually address
the problems -- they just ignite the flames.  Anyone making personal
attacks like calling people whiners or crybabies are really the ones
causing the problem here, because there is no hope of ever making
those constructive.

While the whiners my not have done anything to help, what have the
supporters done?  Any one of them could start digging in to the
available and possibly back-channel information to have something to
supply other than calling people names.  Surely working to get that
information out to users would stop these constant email chains more
constructively than the name-calling?  So I guess anyone not doing
that is also a freeloading leech?


// Brian Mathis
___
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@centos.org
http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos


Re: [CentOS] EL 6 rollout strategies? (Scientific Linux)

2011-05-16 Thread John R Pierce
On 05/16/11 2:41 PM, Radu Gheorghiu wrote:
 I never said I want to do it.

ah, so what DID you say?  you want someone unspecified to do a 
better/different job for you than someone else is already doing for free ?

man, its easy to volunteer other people from the comfort of your desk.

-- 
john r pierceN 37, W 123
santa cruz ca mid-left coast

___
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@centos.org
http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos


Re: [CentOS] EL 6 rollout strategies? (Scientific Linux)

2011-05-16 Thread Radu Gheorghiu
On 05/17/2011 12:47 AM, John R Pierce wrote:
 On 05/16/11 2:41 PM, Radu Gheorghiu wrote:
 I never said I want to do it.
 ah, so what DID you say?  you want someone unspecified to do a
 better/different job for you than someone else is already doing for free ?

 man, its easy to volunteer other people from the comfort of your desk.
If you would re-read my email you would see that I only expressed my 
thoughts.
I did not ask for somebody else to do it. If this is your reaction when 
somebody says what he thinks, you got issues.
___
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@centos.org
http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos


Re: [CentOS] EL 6 rollout strategies? (Scientific Linux)

2011-05-16 Thread John R. Dennison
On Tue, May 17, 2011 at 12:41:23AM +0300, Radu Gheorghiu wrote:
 On 05/17/2011 12:15 AM, Ron Blizzard wrote:
  What a load of undiluted crap.
 Please keep this for yourself.

Why when it's the truth.  Does the truth hurt?

 I never said I want to do it. I only said what the devs are obviously doing.
 Maybe 7+ years is too much waiting for somebody to come and fill their 
 pockets.

s/want to do it/can do it/




John
-- 
Human beings hardly ever learn from the experience of others.  They learn;
when they do, which isn't often, on their own, the hard way.

-- Robert Heinlein (1907-1988), American science fiction writer, Time
   Enough for Love (1973)


pgpP6cpIyxGzZ.pgp
Description: PGP signature
___
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@centos.org
http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos


Re: [CentOS] EL 6 rollout strategies? (Scientific Linux)

2011-05-16 Thread Radu Gheorghiu

On 05/17/2011 12:51 AM, John R. Dennison wrote:

On Tue, May 17, 2011 at 12:41:23AM +0300, Radu Gheorghiu wrote:

On 05/17/2011 12:15 AM, Ron Blizzard wrote:

What a load of undiluted crap.

Please keep this for yourself.

Why when it's the truth.  Does the truth hurt?
It may be the truth from your point of view. What I said in my initial 
post is what many companies i work with feel.
If some of you can't say anything smarter than crap, then please focus 
for a few seconds before posting.

I never said I want to do it. I only said what the devs are obviously doing.
Maybe 7+ years is too much waiting for somebody to come and fill their
pockets.

s/want to do it/can do it/




John


___
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@centos.org
http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos


___
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@centos.org
http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos


Re: [CentOS] EL 6 rollout strategies? (Scientific Linux)

2011-05-16 Thread John R. Dennison
On Tue, May 17, 2011 at 12:55:59AM +0300, Radu Gheorghiu wrote:
 If some of you can't say anything smarter than crap, then please

Please do the rest of us a favor and take your own advice.



John
-- 
People learn something every day, and a lot of times it's that what they
learned the day before was wrong.

-- Bill Vaughan (1915-1977), American columnist and author


pgpH0LKFhdjXl.pgp
Description: PGP signature
___
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@centos.org
http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos


[CentOS] EL 6 rollout strategies? (Scientific Linux)

2011-05-16 Thread R P Herrold
On Tue, 17 May 2011, Radu Gheorghiu wrote:

 The main fear the developers have is that somebody could 
 steal their work and come up with another RHEL clone easily 
 if they release their build system  scripts.

 I think this is obvious by now.

'obvious' to you or not, such is not the case with my view of 
the matter, nor indeed my practice  not that CentOS is 
just the fruit of a binary build solution.  The attention to 
'getting it right' the first time, the trademark and branding 
changes, the art, the bug tracker, the mirror network and its 
'backside management,' the mailing lists, IRC, forum, and wiki 
and more are 'part of the package' as well.

Shall we also stop and describe how to set up Mailman, 
administer IRC channels, in formal detail?  Doing so will do 
nothing to attain the 'goal' which I assume a vast 'silent 
majority' are eagerly awaiting

Some others have set up alternative approaches ** even working 
forward from CentOS' of build SRPMS ** -- SME Server, and 
ClearOS come to mind, but their goals differ

CentOS is not diminished by Scientific Linux, nor vice versa. 
I have communicated cordially with them on matters of common 
interest for years

SME has such radically different goals as a project that 
people do not recognize the current CentOS roots; ClearOS 
again had its own 'take' on the release contents, and has 
recently announced an intent to fork away from using CentOS 
SRPMs after several years following CentOS.  Some of the build 
group from each were in the QA group for a while.  There are 
other RPM based, upstream derived, rebuild projects out there 
as well, that a person has to look closely, and know the 
history, or read the sources, to see where they came from

I've repeatedly published my approach to the build solve, 
including a solution written after solving the parts of 
upstream's '6' sources in which I am interested. I have such 
running in private release.  I've offered several times here 
to offer private guidance 'through the rough spots' for people 
attempting such a upstream cloning

Some of the earliest content in the CentOS wiki was articles 
about build environments, and building as non-root, predating 
the transition by serious builders to mock and other 'in a 
clean chroot' approaches

But the build for the first bootstrap '6' does not encounter 
the same issues that '5' or '4' encountered.  I've said that 
as clearly as I can before, as have others on the CentOS build 
group, and people who treat a rebuild as a thought experiment 
to be talked to death, will NEVER understand that.  One has to 
DO it, to see and understand the way the solution to the 
rebuild problem mutates over time

I see later in this thread 'conspiracy theory' reference' to a 
'massive code base' --- what a crock.  Build-systems dating 
from the old Red Hat RHL 'beehive' fifteen years ago started 
as Rube Goldberg contraptions needing constant love and 
attention from their tenders.  I am told by one such 
'tender' from that era, that it always seemed to break 
after midnight, necessitating sometimes 'driving back to 
office' to repair and restart

The 'state of the art' as to packaging, and automation change 
over time, but there still needs to be a person who 
understands the build automation system, able to go in a 
'kill' a hung job and experienced eyes to diagnose and patch 
around the inevitable problems that surface in the final few 
percent of the packages.

And anyone who thinks that patching 'anaconda' (the installer) 
is a well defined task has no conception of the enormity of 
the changes over time that anaconda has gone through.  I am 
tremendously unhappy with the changes with the anaconda TUI 
mode under upstream's '6' and once a CentOS 6 emerges, I can 
foresee much support load with people adversely affected

A couple have actually followed through the work of rebuilding 
and integrating the upstream's '6' sources (not the people who 
would rather carp and troll here, of course), and I've 
mentioned privately helping other people building the latest 
upstream sources from scratch with their efforts. At least 
two have working sub-sets to their interest and project goal, 
complete with installers, at the upstream's '6' level

heck -- In looking at my local developmental 'crash and burn' 
laptop, which started live as a CentOS 5 unit 14 months ago, I 
see over 30 ** POST ** upstream '6' level packages.  Looking, 
I see that my day-to-day office developmental workstation (a 
bit over three years old at this point) has 1101 of 2287 total 
packages that are local deviations from C 5 (mostly pushing in 
financial and statistical tool-chains, but also developmental 
tools ... automake, m4, libtool, and so forth)

Sometimes to reproduce a bug, I need to deploy a fresh machine 
image, just to make sure my local changes to not mask 
something -- the changes by upstream to the named 
configuration files generation comes to mind as one I needed 
to 'revert' back to a 

Re: [CentOS] EL 6 rollout strategies? (Scientific Linux)

2011-05-16 Thread Stephen Harris
On Mon, May 16, 2011 at 06:08:47PM -0400, R P Herrold wrote:
 other RPM based, upstream derived, rebuild projects out there 
 as well, that a person has to look closely, and know the 
 history, or read the sources, to see where they came from

And then there's commercial projects, such as Citrix Xen Server (one
of the leading competitors to VMware).  I wonder what that's built on.
Let's look...

   # cat /etc/redhat-release
   XenServer release 5.6.0-31188p (xenenterprise)

   # rpm -q centos-release
   centos-release-5-4.el5.centos.1

Dang; that evil CentOS project gets everywhere...

-- 

rgds
Stephen
___
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@centos.org
http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos


Re: [CentOS] EL 6 rollout strategies? (Scientific Linux)

2011-05-16 Thread Gordon Messmer
On 05/15/2011 06:10 PM, Johnny Hughes wrote:
 Where is Ubuntu telling people exactly where they stand on producing a
 their new releases.

 What about Red Hat ... how about Fedora.

I don't know about Ubuntu, I don't use it.

Fedora, on the other hand publishes their schedule:
http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Releases/15/Schedule
And the release life cycle:
http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Fedora_Release_Life_Cycle
And their release criteria:
http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/QA/ReleaseCriteria
And release engineering documentation, including the names of 
responsible persons and directions for getting involved:
http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/ReleaseEngineering
And standard operating procedures:
http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/ReleaseEngineering/SOP

The release criteria includes a Bugzilla list for a release blocker bug 
which shows users what issues currently need to be resolved before the 
release.  Users are very well informed about the state of the project.

Fedora uses Koji to build packages.  Users can view build logs in the 
Koji interface as well.

After building packages, maintainers push to Bodhi, where users can test 
the package and indicate success or failure before the package is 
finally published.

If CentOS were run even remotely like Fedora, these discussions wouldn't 
come up.

 Is there someplace I do not know about where these distributions tell
 you what they are having trouble building?

Apparently.

 Show me another list where the developers interact with the users as
 much as this one.

My interactions with Fedora's developers and maintainers have always 
been both pleasant and productive.

 CentOS has never been secretive.  We published examples of our build
 scripts for the RPMs and the disros, the mock we use and plague.
 Something Red Hat has never done.

It doesn't always seem that way to users.  Certainly, the trend has been 
to greater openness and more insight.  That has been encouraging.

In February of '09, Karanbir published a blog on the r-v-m routine.  I 
vaguely recall that sometime in the years before that he stated that the 
scripts used to build the release would not be released, which was a 
significant part of the reason that I, personally, have regarded the 
project as somewhat secretive.  More generally, I would describe the 
project as somewhat secretive by virtue of the lack of communication 
with users.  I don't intend to imply that the developers are malicious, 
just that many users clearly feel like they do not and cannot understand 
the state of the project.

Look, I appreciate the new QA site.  It's great.  I sort of remember 
someone linking to a page with a list of the tasks blocking the release 
of C6, even though I can't find it now.  That also makes me a happier 
user.  However, I can appreciate CentOS and the work of its developers 
without thinking that it is perfect, right?  Is that too much to ask?

 Can't you ungrateful bastards take the free software I make by following
 the licensing requirements and be happy with that?

Wow. I guess not.

All of that is more or less a distraction from the point at which this 
branch of the thread began.  One person suggested that 6.1 might take 
only a month, and that seems highly questionable.  Without making any 
value judgments about whether or not the distribution *should* be 
available in one month, or whether some other project can do it faster, 
and without questioning the competence of anyone, I still think it's 
legitimate to express doubts that a release can be made ready in that 
time frame.  There is no recent evidence that users can expect that.
___
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@centos.org
http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos


Re: [CentOS] EL 6 rollout strategies? (Scientific Linux)

2011-05-16 Thread Gordon Messmer
On 05/15/2011 07:00 PM, Ron Blizzard wrote:
 So, when you take 5.6 out of the mix (taking into account the three
 releases at once), the average time from Red Hat 5.x release to CentOS
 5.x release is 41.5 days. And 5.5 was 44 days. Your point?

There is a general trend toward longer delays between upstream and 
CentOS releases, with occasional anomalies of *extremely* long delays. 
That is the point.

 Up until
 5.6 the longest it took for a CentOS 5.x release was 69 days, 5.4 took
 49 days and 5.5 took 44 days. Is that going up or down?

 From the beginning of the series?  Generally longer.

 Take 5.3 out
 of the mix (as well as the three-release 5.6) and you've got an
 average of 36 days.

And all of 5.3, 5.4, 5.5, and 5.6 have taken longer than that.

 Just barely over a month. Even with 5.3 it
 averages about a month and a half. 5.6 (and 5.3) were the aberrations,
 not the average. Thanks for the figures. They don't prove your point.

I think they do.  Even when you cherry-pick the data as you did.

Tell you what: Plot the release delays on a graph using the release as 
the X axis and the delay as the Y axis.  Based on that graph, plot the 
trend of the data.  Even if you exclude the outlying data, I can't 
imagine a way to honestly plot a trend that isn't growing.

 I can't even begin to comprehend the logical failure behind the idea
 that because SL and CentOS are keeping up with each other that CentOS is
 not getting worse.  Again, Dag interjected only to ask why any
 reasonable person would expect 6.1 to take only one month when 5.6 took
 three.  The fact that there is a general trend toward longer release
 delays supports that question.

 Again, three releases at once.

For certain definitions of at once.  Upstream 6.0 was released in 
November.  5.6 was release about 2 months later, and work on C6 was 
stopped in order to get 5.6 out.  4.9 was out about a month after that. 
  CentOS was, as far as we know, working on 4.9 and 5.6 at the same 
time, but not on 6.

Moreover, for the near future, there will continue to be multiple 
releases from upstream within a couple of months of each other.  Is 
there any rational basis on which we should expect that the CentOS 
releases will no longer take several months under the same conditions 
that they've been faced with?
___
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@centos.org
http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos


Re: [CentOS] EL 6 rollout strategies? (Scientific Linux)

2011-05-16 Thread Ron Blizzard
On Mon, May 16, 2011 at 4:46 PM, Brian Mathis

 The constant drip drip drip, as you put it, is generated from the
 disrespect shown to the users, not the other way around.  Anyone who
 asks how much longer or how they can help is immediately slapped down
 and told to go away.

Bullcrap. I've seen the same old droning by the same posters for at
least a year now. It's not constructive criticism it's whining. When
the developers tell you that adding more and more work will slow (not
speed) CentOS development, they probably know what they're talking
about. You think?

 The understanding that's missing from the Devs and sycophants is that
 users are asking BECAUSE THEY CARE.  BECAUSE THEY LIKE THE PROJECT.
 BECAUSE THEY UNDERSTAND THAT THIS IS A LOT OF WORK.  And their concern
 is met with nothing but derision and accusations of being constant
 freeloading whiners.

When all I see is constant whining, and empty threats to move to
another distribution, what else can I conclude except that whiners
will be whiners. If you suggest something, and it's rejected (for
whatever reason) it's no longer constructive criticism to keep
droning on about it. I don't see concern, I see whining.

 As for appreciating the developers, that is what all of the posts
 complaining about the process are about.  People complain they can't
 help.  People complain they can't do anything.  People complain that
 when they ask, they are shut out instead of welcomed in.  All of this
 comes from a desire to help the project.

No, what *some* users whine about is that they can't control the
process. They're miffed because their great suggestions are
rejected. I realize that I'm probably lumping all complainers into the
same category -- sorry but I'm fed up with the constant drip, drip,
drip. At the very least let the developers get out from under the
workload before offering yet more constructive criticism.

 The sycophants simply unable to have any real discussion.  Those with
 criticisms have valid ones, but the responses do not actually address
 the problems -- they just ignite the flames.  Anyone making personal
 attacks like calling people whiners or crybabies are really the ones
 causing the problem here, because there is no hope of ever making
 those constructive.

Ignite the flames? Right. When I come here I see whining. I see
complaints about the time required to rebuild CentOS. I see myself
called a sycophant for defending the developers. But I'm the one
igniting the flames. What a pant load.

 While the whiners my not have done anything to help, what have the
 supporters done?  Any one of them could start digging in to the
 available and possibly back-channel information to have something to
 supply other than calling people names.  Surely working to get that
 information out to users would stop these constant email chains more
 constructively than the name-calling?  So I guess anyone not doing
 that is also a freeloading leech?

We supporters (like he quotes, by the way) don't see the huge
problem the concerned constantly yammer on about. We appreciate
all the hard work and realize that CentOS is not Red Hat and that, if
we absolutely have to have the newest releases immediately, we can go
with the upstream.

Good thing the concerned don't engage in name calling like the us
sycophants.

-- 
RonB -- Using CentOS 5.6
___
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@centos.org
http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos


Re: [CentOS] EL 6 rollout strategies? (Scientific Linux)

2011-05-16 Thread Ljubomir Ljubojevic
Janne TH. Nyman wrote:
 Who cares? I find it amazing that these guys still keep on building and
 providing considering how their users treat them.
 
 Team CentOS, keep your heads up. For me, you are still the best thing
 that happened since sliced bread.
 
 Come on, community, where is your love?
 
 My 2 pence,
+1

Ljubomir
___
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@centos.org
http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos


Re: [CentOS] EL 6 rollout strategies? (Scientific Linux)

2011-05-16 Thread Ljubomir Ljubojevic
Gordon Messmer wrote:
 On 05/15/2011 06:10 PM, Johnny Hughes wrote:
 Where is Ubuntu telling people exactly where they stand on producing a
 their new releases.

 What about Red Hat ... how about Fedora.
 
 I don't know about Ubuntu, I don't use it.
 
 Fedora, on the other hand publishes their schedule:
 http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Releases/15/Schedule
 And the release life cycle:
 http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Fedora_Release_Life_Cycle
 And their release criteria:
 http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/QA/ReleaseCriteria
 And release engineering documentation, including the names of 
 responsible persons and directions for getting involved:
 http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/ReleaseEngineering
 And standard operating procedures:
 http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/ReleaseEngineering/SOP
 
 The release criteria includes a Bugzilla list for a release blocker bug 
 which shows users what issues currently need to be resolved before the 
 release.  Users are very well informed about the state of the project.
 
 Fedora uses Koji to build packages.  Users can view build logs in the 
 Koji interface as well.
 
 After building packages, maintainers push to Bodhi, where users can test 
 the package and indicate success or failure before the package is 
 finally published.
 
 If CentOS were run even remotely like Fedora, these discussions wouldn't 
 come up.

There is no way that CentOS or any other REBUILD project can be run as 
DEVELOPMENT project where you can build as you like. Scan both mailing 
lists few months back where those differences were thoroughly explained.

snip

 All of that is more or less a distraction from the point at which this 
 branch of the thread began.  One person suggested that 6.1 might take 
 only a month, and that seems highly questionable.  Without making any 
 value judgments about whether or not the distribution *should* be 
 available in one month, or whether some other project can do it faster, 
 and without questioning the competence of anyone, I still think it's 
 legitimate to express doubts that a release can be made ready in that 
 time frame.  There is no recent evidence that users can expect that.

It started much earlier then my post about around 1 month timeframe, I 
would say a week or so at least in this thread allone. Real start of 
discussion started several months ago. If you are brave enough, read 
entire mail lists (both of them) and keep track of who said what, when
and as a response to what. Then you will have slightly different 
perspective.


Ljubomir
___
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@centos.org
http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos


Re: [CentOS] EL 6 rollout strategies? (Scientific Linux)

2011-05-16 Thread aurfalien
Same weekly/bi-monthly BS.

YAA

It always circles back to a#$holes and elbows.

- aurf
___
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@centos.org
http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos


Re: [CentOS] EL 6 rollout strategies? (Scientific Linux)

2011-05-16 Thread Ron Blizzard
On Mon, May 16, 2011 at 7:17 PM,  aurfal...@gmail.com wrote:
 Same weekly/bi-monthly BS.

 YAA

 It always circles back to a#$holes and elbows.

This is the main reason I want CentOS 6 to come out. I'm hoping for a
lull in the whining.

-- 
RonB -- Using CentOS 5.6
___
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@centos.org
http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos


Re: [CentOS] EL 6 rollout strategies? (Scientific Linux)

2011-05-16 Thread aurfalien
On May 16, 2011, at 5:22 PM, Ron Blizzard wrote:

 On Mon, May 16, 2011 at 7:17 PM,  aurfal...@gmail.com wrote:
 Same weekly/bi-monthly BS.

 YAA

 It always circles back to a#$holes and elbows.

 This is the main reason I want CentOS 6 to come out. I'm hoping for a
 lull in the whining.

I know, once Idol finishes and Centos 6 relz, we'll have to find some  
thing else to rail about.

- aurf
___
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@centos.org
http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos


Re: [CentOS] EL 6 rollout strategies? (Scientific Linux)

2011-05-16 Thread Ron Blizzard
On Mon, May 16, 2011 at 7:25 PM,  aurfal...@gmail.com wrote:
 On May 16, 2011, at 5:22 PM, Ron Blizzard wrote:

 On Mon, May 16, 2011 at 7:17 PM,  aurfal...@gmail.com wrote:
 Same weekly/bi-monthly BS.

 YAA

 It always circles back to a#$holes and elbows.

 This is the main reason I want CentOS 6 to come out. I'm hoping for a
 lull in the whining.

 I know, once Idol finishes and Centos 6 relz, we'll have to find some
 thing else to rail about.

I guess 6.1 is around the corner. Heck, this particular thread could
still be going by the time 7.0 comes out.

-- 
RonB -- Using CentOS 5.6
___
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@centos.org
http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos


Re: [CentOS] EL 6 rollout strategies? (Scientific Linux)

2011-05-16 Thread Brian Mathis
On Mon, May 16, 2011 at 7:03 PM, Ron Blizzard rb4cen...@gmail.com wrote:
 On Mon, May 16, 2011 at 4:46 PM, Brian Mathis

 The constant drip drip drip, as you put it, is generated from the
 disrespect shown to the users, not the other way around.  Anyone who
 asks how much longer or how they can help is immediately slapped down
 and told to go away.

 Bullcrap. I've seen the same old droning by the same posters for at
 least a year now. It's not constructive criticism it's whining. When
 the developers tell you that adding more and more work will slow (not
 speed) CentOS development, they probably know what they're talking
 about. You think?

 The understanding that's missing from the Devs and sycophants is that
 users are asking BECAUSE THEY CARE.  BECAUSE THEY LIKE THE PROJECT.
 BECAUSE THEY UNDERSTAND THAT THIS IS A LOT OF WORK.  And their concern
 is met with nothing but derision and accusations of being constant
 freeloading whiners.

 When all I see is constant whining, and empty threats to move to
 another distribution, what else can I conclude except that whiners
 will be whiners. If you suggest something, and it's rejected (for
 whatever reason) it's no longer constructive criticism to keep
 droning on about it. I don't see concern, I see whining.

 As for appreciating the developers, that is what all of the posts
 complaining about the process are about.  People complain they can't
 help.  People complain they can't do anything.  People complain that
 when they ask, they are shut out instead of welcomed in.  All of this
 comes from a desire to help the project.

 No, what *some* users whine about is that they can't control the
 process. They're miffed because their great suggestions are
 rejected. I realize that I'm probably lumping all complainers into the
 same category -- sorry but I'm fed up with the constant drip, drip,
 drip. At the very least let the developers get out from under the
 workload before offering yet more constructive criticism.

 The sycophants simply unable to have any real discussion.  Those with
 criticisms have valid ones, but the responses do not actually address
 the problems -- they just ignite the flames.  Anyone making personal
 attacks like calling people whiners or crybabies are really the ones
 causing the problem here, because there is no hope of ever making
 those constructive.

 Ignite the flames? Right. When I come here I see whining. I see
 complaints about the time required to rebuild CentOS. I see myself
 called a sycophant for defending the developers. But I'm the one
 igniting the flames. What a pant load.

 While the whiners my not have done anything to help, what have the
 supporters done?  Any one of them could start digging in to the
 available and possibly back-channel information to have something to
 supply other than calling people names.  Surely working to get that
 information out to users would stop these constant email chains more
 constructively than the name-calling?  So I guess anyone not doing
 that is also a freeloading leech?

 We supporters (like he quotes, by the way) don't see the huge
 problem the concerned constantly yammer on about. We appreciate
 all the hard work and realize that CentOS is not Red Hat and that, if
 we absolutely have to have the newest releases immediately, we can go
 with the upstream.

 Good thing the concerned don't engage in name calling like the us
 sycophants.
 --
 RonB -- Using CentOS 5.6


People don't complain just for the fun of it (if that's the world you
live in, I feel sorry for you), they complain because something is
bothering them.  In this case, it is the very real and measurable
delays in releases that seem to be getting longer.  Release delays are
an incontrovertible fact in this case, and anyone arguing otherwise
needs their logic unit replaced.

The case becomes even stronger given that, as you say, people have
been complaining for at least a year now.  That shows a long term
pattern of the same issue coming up over and over and bothering
people.  There really can be no stronger case that is supported by
both logic and evidence that there is a problem.  It has been
mentioned in numerous blog posts, twitter posts, and tech magazines.

Given that the issue is so clear, it adds insult to insult when
someone asks about it and is treated like the problem doesn't exist.
Suggestions given by people are rejected flat out not because they
don't like the suggestion, but by countering that the problem doesn't
exist.  This is what's so inflammatory and causes so many flame wars.
Having a constructive discussion is derailed most frequently not by
the complainers, but by the if-you-don't-like-it-get-off-my-lawns.


// Brian Mathis
___
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@centos.org
http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos


Re: [CentOS] EL 6 rollout strategies? (Scientific Linux)

2011-05-16 Thread Ron Blizzard
On Mon, May 16, 2011 at 8:46 PM, Brian Mathis

 People don't complain just for the fun of it (if that's the world you
 live in, I feel sorry for you), they complain because something is
 bothering them.  In this case, it is the very real and measurable
 delays in releases that seem to be getting longer.  Release delays are
 an incontrovertible fact in this case, and anyone arguing otherwise
 needs their logic unit replaced.

Up until 6.0 (with three releases at once 6.0, 5.6 and 4.9) we've seen
the average delay for 5.x releases was 41.5 days. 5.5 came out in 44
days. If you can't wait a month and a half (or even two months) you
should probably buy Red Hat.

 The case becomes even stronger given that, as you say, people have
 been complaining for at least a year now.  That shows a long term
 pattern of the same issue coming up over and over and bothering
 people.  There really can be no stronger case that is supported by
 both logic and evidence that there is a problem.  It has been
 mentioned in numerous blog posts, twitter posts, and tech magazines.

No, the same *very* few people have been complaining for over a year
now. And they're not just complaining about delays, they're
complaining about lack of community input into what constitutes
CentOS. Even to the point of saying that they should be in the loop
in deciding what goes into CentOS (like Fedora). News to whiners,
CentOS is a rebuild project, the goal is to rebuild Red Hat. (No
further input needed on that subject.) As for length of time, CentOS
5.5 came out less than a year ago. It took 44 days. Again, if that's
too long of a wait, maybe you should move to Red Hat.

 Given that the issue is so clear, it adds insult to insult when
 someone asks about it and is treated like the problem doesn't exist.
 Suggestions given by people are rejected flat out not because they
 don't like the suggestion, but by countering that the problem doesn't
 exist.  This is what's so inflammatory and causes so many flame wars.
 Having a constructive discussion is derailed most frequently not by
 the complainers, but by the if-you-don't-like-it-get-off-my-lawns.

No, the issue isn't that clear. The average time of releases has
slipped from the original 28 days to 41.5 days (pre 5.6 and the triple
whammy). For me the real issue *is* the whining. The constant drip,
drip, dripping... and I'm just reading the mailing list. Imagine what
it must be like for those who are actually doing the work.

Nothing is holding you to CentOS, so I'm guessing (despite the delays)
it must fill a need you have. Maybe a little understanding (putting
yourself in the other person's shoes) and a bit gratitude should be
forthcoming.

And, by the way, not directed specifically at you, but reading between
the lines it appears that one issue may be that some contractors are
selling cheap Red Hat to their customers and then, when the
customers ask Where's the update? they're scrambling to explain the
situation. They need to be up front. We're using a Red Hat rebuild,
CentOS... updates are delayed. It's the nature of a rebuild.

-- 
RonB -- Using CentOS 5.6
___
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@centos.org
http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos


Re: [CentOS] EL 6 rollout strategies? (Scientific Linux)

2011-05-16 Thread Christopher Chan
On Tuesday, May 17, 2011 10:37 AM, Ron Blizzard wrote:

 And, by the way, not directed specifically at you, but reading between
 the lines it appears that one issue may be that some contractors are
 selling cheap Red Hat to their customers and then, when the
 customers ask Where's the update? they're scrambling to explain the
 situation. They need to be up front. We're using a Red Hat rebuild,
 CentOS... updates are delayed. It's the nature of a rebuild.


+1
___
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@centos.org
http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos


Re: [CentOS] EL 6 rollout strategies? (Scientific Linux)

2011-05-15 Thread Gordon Messmer
On 05/12/2011 02:05 AM, Ron Blizzard wrote:
 But at that time there should only be one point release on the table,
 instead of two point releases and one major release. Is everyone
 forgetting that 4.9, 5.6 and 6.0 were all out at the same time?

As far as users know, all work on 6.0 was postponed to get 5.6 done.  At 
the time of 5.6's release, it was the only release the team was working 
on.  Work on 5 should have been something the team was quite familiar 
with by that time.  If 5.6 took 3 months to finish, then Dag's question 
is quite fair: why would we expect 6.1 to take so much less time?
___
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@centos.org
http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos


Re: [CentOS] EL 6 rollout strategies? (Scientific Linux)

2011-05-15 Thread Ron Blizzard
On Sun, May 15, 2011 at 3:11 AM, Gordon Messmer yiny...@eburg.com wrote:
 On 05/12/2011 02:05 AM, Ron Blizzard wrote:
 But at that time there should only be one point release on the table,
 instead of two point releases and one major release. Is everyone
 forgetting that 4.9, 5.6 and 6.0 were all out at the same time?

 As far as users know, all work on 6.0 was postponed to get 5.6 done.  At
 the time of 5.6's release, it was the only release the team was working
 on.  Work on 5 should have been something the team was quite familiar
 with by that time.  If 5.6 took 3 months to finish, then Dag's question
 is quite fair: why would we expect 6.1 to take so much less time?

You're leaving out release 4.9. You're also leaving out the fact that
two major holidays occurred during the time *frame* that these three
releases needed to be built. You're also leaving out the fact (as
mentioned by one of the developers) that they had to start from
scratch on 6.0 -- that they'll be set up for 6.1 when it comes out.
You're also leaving out the fact that SL had to rebuild the same three
releases -- and they're still working on the last of those -- so the
amount of time it's taking CentOS developers squares with the amount
of time required by the SL developers.

Check out the history of point releases between SL and CentOS. If I
remember correctly the release dates are pretty close -- I think
CentOS is usually out slightly earlier then SL,(realizing, of course,
that the two distributions are handled differently).

A quick review. 6.0 -- CentOS - (Soon)SL - 3/3/11   -- same time
frame (1 of 3)
   5.6 -- CentOS - 4/8/11SL - (Soon)   --
same time frame (1 of 3)
   5.5 -- CentOS - 5/14/10   SL - 5/19/10
   5.4 -- CentOS - 10/21/9   SL - 11/4/9
   5.3 -- CentOS -  3/31/9SL - 3/19/9
   5.2 -- CentOS -  6/24/8SL - 6/26/8
   5.1 -- CentOS -  12/2/7SL - 1/16/8
   5.0 -- CentOS -  4/12/7SL -  5/4/7
   4.9 -- CentOS -  3/2/11SL -  5/6/11  --
same time frame  (1 of 3)
   4.8 -- CentOS -  8/21/9SL -  7/28/9
   4.7 -- CentOS -  9/13/8SL -  9/3/8
   4.6 -- CentOS -  12/16/7  SL -  3/12/8

You can look them up on Wikipedia if you want more. Do you see any
huge change in patterns here? I don't. Note the first of CentOS'
releases on these three updates came out on 3/2/11, SL's first release
came on 3/3/11. It appears that the last of the three releases (one
for each distribution) will happen at about the same time also (I
don't know how long it takes a CentOS release to get through QA or how
long it takes SL to go from beta to finished, but they're both on the
home stretch.)

So, overall, it's taking both distributions a little less than seven
months on these two point releases and one major release. If you're
cynical you could say it's taken CentOS almost seven months on 6.0,
where it took SL a bit less than four months. But, if I were cynical,
I could say, yeah, but it only took CentOS about three weeks on 4.9
and it took SL nearly three months. And CentOS got 5.6 out in three
months where it's taking SL nearly five months. (I realize this
doesn't tell the whole story but I'm trying to drive home the point
that there are three releases and both rebuild distributions
developers are taking about the same amount of time. It is the
priorities that are different.) I don't see the need for constant
harping.

(Sorry to ramble.)

-- 
RonB -- Using CentOS 5.6
___
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@centos.org
http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos


Re: [CentOS] EL 6 rollout strategies? (Scientific Linux)

2011-05-15 Thread Michel Donais
A perhaps stupid question from a newby

Why 4.9 is out in a so long time frame after 5.0?


   5.6 -- CentOS - 4/8/11SL - (Soon)   --
same time frame (1 of 3)
   5.5 -- CentOS - 5/14/10   SL - 5/19/10
   5.4 -- CentOS - 10/21/9   SL - 11/4/9
   5.3 -- CentOS -  3/31/9SL - 3/19/9
   5.2 -- CentOS -  6/24/8SL - 6/26/8
   5.1 -- CentOS -  12/2/7SL - 1/16/8
   5.0 -- CentOS -  4/12/7SL -  5/4/7
   4.9 -- CentOS -  3/2/11SL -  5/6/11  --
---
Michel Donais
___
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@centos.org
http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos


Re: [CentOS] EL 6 rollout strategies? (Scientific Linux)

2011-05-15 Thread Dotan Cohen
On Sun, May 15, 2011 at 16:35, Michel Donais don...@telupton.com wrote:
 A perhaps stupid question from a newby

 Why 4.9 is out in a so long time frame after 5.0?


                       5.6 -- CentOS - 4/8/11    SL - (Soon)   --
 same time frame (1 of 3)
                       5.5 -- CentOS - 5/14/10   SL - 5/19/10
                       5.4 -- CentOS - 10/21/9   SL - 11/4/9
                       5.3 -- CentOS -  3/31/9    SL - 3/19/9
                       5.2 -- CentOS -  6/24/8    SL - 6/26/8
                       5.1 -- CentOS -  12/2/7    SL - 1/16/8
                       5.0 -- CentOS -  4/12/7    SL -  5/4/7
                       4.9 -- CentOS -  3/2/11    SL -  5/6/11  --


It's a different branch. The 4.x branch had/has continued support even
though the 5.x (and now 6.x) branches are released.

-- 
Dotan Cohen

http://gibberish.co.il
http://what-is-what.com
___
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@centos.org
http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos


Re: [CentOS] EL 6 rollout strategies? (Scientific Linux)

2011-05-15 Thread Johnny Hughes
On 05/15/2011 08:41 AM, Dotan Cohen wrote:
 On Sun, May 15, 2011 at 16:35, Michel Donais don...@telupton.com wrote:
 A perhaps stupid question from a newby

 Why 4.9 is out in a so long time frame after 5.0?


   5.6 -- CentOS - 4/8/11SL - (Soon)   --
 same time frame (1 of 3)
   5.5 -- CentOS - 5/14/10   SL - 5/19/10
   5.4 -- CentOS - 10/21/9   SL - 11/4/9
   5.3 -- CentOS -  3/31/9SL - 3/19/9
   5.2 -- CentOS -  6/24/8SL - 6/26/8
   5.1 -- CentOS -  12/2/7SL - 1/16/8
   5.0 -- CentOS -  4/12/7SL -  5/4/7
   4.9 -- CentOS -  3/2/11SL -  5/6/11  --

 
 It's a different branch. The 4.x branch had/has continued support even
 though the 5.x (and now 6.x) branches are released.
 

Every branch of Enterprise Linux is supported with updated for 7 years
... that is the purpose of Enterprise Linux.  This is as compared to the
standard Linux distributions that usually have 1 year (current and last
version ... release every 6 months).

More info here for the upstream ... CentOS mirrors all but the Extended
Life Cycle:

https://access.redhat.com/support/policy/updates/errata/

(CentOS would also mirror the Extended Life Cycle, but we can not get
the SRPMS from the upstream provider)





signature.asc
Description: OpenPGP digital signature
___
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@centos.org
http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos


Re: [CentOS] EL 6 rollout strategies? (Scientific Linux)

2011-05-15 Thread Gordon Messmer
On 05/15/2011 03:52 AM, Ron Blizzard wrote:
 On Sun, May 15, 2011 at 3:11 AM, Gordon Messmeryiny...@eburg.com  wrote:
 As far as users know, all work on 6.0 was postponed to get 5.6 done.  At
 the time of 5.6's release, it was the only release the team was working
 on.  Work on 5 should have been something the team was quite familiar
 with by that time.  If 5.6 took 3 months to finish, then Dag's question
 is quite fair: why would we expect 6.1 to take so much less time?

 You're leaving out release 4.9.

No, I'm not.  4.9 was released just over a month after 5.6.  If 5.6 
couldn't be finished in that month, why would 6.1 be finished in only a 
month?

 You're also leaving out the fact that
 two major holidays occurred during the time *frame* that these three
 releases needed to be built.

I'm not sure which two you're referring to.  Are there going to be no 
holidays following the release of 6.1?

 You're also leaving out the fact (as
 mentioned by one of the developers) that they had to start from
 scratch on 6.0 -- that they'll be set up for 6.1 when it comes out.

I don't see how that's relevant.  They didn't have to start from scratch 
on 5.6, and that took three months.  Why would 6.1 take so much less 
time than 5.6?

 You're also leaving out the fact that SL had to rebuild the same three
 releases -- and they're still working on the last of those -- so the
 amount of time it's taking CentOS developers squares with the amount
 of time required by the SL developers.

No, I'm not.  Neither I nor Dag, as far as I saw, brought SL into the 
conversation at all.  The question is not whether CentOS can build 
releases in less time than SL, or even a reasonable amount of time.  The 
question that Dag posed was why users (or the release team) should 
expect 6.1 to be done in one month, when 5.6 took three and was a fairly 
well rehearsed process by that point.
___
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@centos.org
http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos


Re: [CentOS] EL 6 rollout strategies? (Scientific Linux)

2011-05-15 Thread Ron Blizzard
On Sun, May 15, 2011 at 3:00 PM, Gordon Messmer yiny...@eburg.com wrote:
 No, I'm not.  Neither I nor Dag, as far as I saw, brought SL into the
 conversation at all.  The question is not whether CentOS can build
 releases in less time than SL, or even a reasonable amount of time.  The
 question that Dag posed was why users (or the release team) should
 expect 6.1 to be done in one month, when 5.6 took three and was a fairly
 well rehearsed process by that point.

Obviously I missed the part where I (or someone) said (or claimed)
that 6.1 could be done in a month. What does a month have to do with
anything?

There is a certain amount of time required to rebuild the upstream
releases. Whatever that amount of time is, CentOS and SL seem to
require about the same number. So I'm trying to figure out... why is
CentOS attacked so much for taking too long? -- whereas SL is lauded
as the go to distribution?

As I showed in the list of release dates, CentOS and SL have almost
always been fairly close (CentOS usually a little quicker). So why the
claim that CentOS is getting worse on release dates? (General claim,
not specifically yours.) I see no pattern in the release dates to
indicate CentOS is generally falling behind SL. As has mentioned too
many times now, CentOS is slower getting 6.0 out because they chose to
update 4.x and 5.x first. But the time to get all three releases
released appears to almost the same for both distributions.

And the reason I bring this up is 1) SL is mentioned in the subject
line and 2) SL is (I believe) the only other major community Red Hat
rebuilding project. So, who else should I be comparing CentOS release
dates with?

-- 
RonB -- Using CentOS 5.6
___
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@centos.org
http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos


Re: [CentOS] EL 6 rollout strategies? (Scientific Linux)

2011-05-15 Thread Gordon Messmer
On 05/15/2011 02:23 PM, Ron Blizzard wrote:
 Obviously I missed the part where I (or someone) said (or claimed)
 that 6.1 could be done in a month.

Well, that is where this branch of the thread began.

http://lists.centos.org/pipermail/centos/2011-May/111443.html

Ljubomir Ljubojevic began the branch with the expectation that there 
would be not more than a month between C6.0 and C6.1.  I believe that he 
misspoke, and probably meant that there would be not more than one month 
between the upstream release of RHEL 6.1 and the release of C6.1.

http://lists.centos.org/pipermail/centos/2011-May/111473.html

Dag Wieers replied and asked if there was any reason to believe that 
this would actually happen.  I think this is a perfectly valid question. 
  If 5.6 could not be done in a month, why would we expect that 6.1 
would be?

 What does a month have to do with anything?

It was a time frame posed on the list.  I don't believe it has any 
significance beyond Ljubomir's suggestion that 6.1 could be completed in 
that amount of time.  It seems unlikely.

 There is a certain amount of time required to rebuild the upstream
 releases. Whatever that amount of time is, CentOS and SL seem to
 require about the same number. So I'm trying to figure out... why is
 CentOS attacked so much for taking too long? -- whereas SL is lauded
 as the go to distribution?

Well, CentOS is generally attacked for taking a long time because users 
have had no visibility into the process.  Most people make what I would 
think is a perfectly reasonable request: not that the distribution is 
available immediately and not that a specific release date is given and 
kept, but that information about the tasks to be completed is published. 
  The process around building CentOS has traditionally been very 
secretive, which makes the name *Community* Enterprise OS seem very inapt.

SL is not so much lauded, I think, as discussed right now because users 
who want a rebuild of RHEL 6.0 have no other option.  There is no beta 
of CentOS for them to install and review (which would make contribution 
significantly easier).  Users are trying to figure out whether or not it 
makes sense for them to wait for CentOS 6.0 or use something that's 
available now.  Because they have very little insight into the process 
or progress that has been made, they cannot easily evaluate that 
question.  It is reasonable for this to produce a great deal of anxiety.

 As I showed in the list of release dates, CentOS and SL have almost
 always been fairly close (CentOS usually a little quicker). So why the
 claim that CentOS is getting worse on release dates? (General claim,
 not specifically yours.)

Look at wikipedia's page describing CentOS.  They include a column for 
the delay between the upstream release and CentOS's.  For the 5 series, 
it looks like:

Release Delay
5   28d
5.1 25d
5.2 34d
5.3 69d
5.4 49d
5.5 44d
5.6 85d

Almost every release in the 5 series took longer than the initial 
release for 5.0.  Even if you ignore the release of 5.6, there is a 
generally upward trend in the amount of time taken for each release. 
How could anyone reasonably claim that CentOS is NOT getting worse on 
release dates?

I can't even begin to comprehend the logical failure behind the idea 
that because SL and CentOS are keeping up with each other that CentOS is 
not getting worse.  Again, Dag interjected only to ask why any 
reasonable person would expect 6.1 to take only one month when 5.6 took 
three.  The fact that there is a general trend toward longer release 
delays supports that question.

 I see no pattern in the release dates to
 indicate CentOS is generally falling behind SL.

That's fine, but that's not what's being discussed.
___
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@centos.org
http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos


Re: [CentOS] EL 6 rollout strategies? (Scientific Linux)

2011-05-15 Thread Johnny Hughes
On 05/15/2011 05:12 PM, Gordon Messmer wrote:
 On 05/15/2011 02:23 PM, Ron Blizzard wrote:
 Obviously I missed the part where I (or someone) said (or claimed)
 that 6.1 could be done in a month.
 
 Well, that is where this branch of the thread began.
 
 http://lists.centos.org/pipermail/centos/2011-May/111443.html
 
 Ljubomir Ljubojevic began the branch with the expectation that there 
 would be not more than a month between C6.0 and C6.1.  I believe that he 
 misspoke, and probably meant that there would be not more than one month 
 between the upstream release of RHEL 6.1 and the release of C6.1.
 
 http://lists.centos.org/pipermail/centos/2011-May/111473.html
 
 Dag Wieers replied and asked if there was any reason to believe that 
 this would actually happen.  I think this is a perfectly valid question. 
   If 5.6 could not be done in a month, why would we expect that 6.1 
 would be?
 
 What does a month have to do with anything?
 
 It was a time frame posed on the list.  I don't believe it has any 
 significance beyond Ljubomir's suggestion that 6.1 could be completed in 
 that amount of time.  It seems unlikely.
 
 There is a certain amount of time required to rebuild the upstream
 releases. Whatever that amount of time is, CentOS and SL seem to
 require about the same number. So I'm trying to figure out... why is
 CentOS attacked so much for taking too long? -- whereas SL is lauded
 as the go to distribution?
 
 Well, CentOS is generally attacked for taking a long time because users 
 have had no visibility into the process.  Most people make what I would 
 think is a perfectly reasonable request: not that the distribution is 
 available immediately and not that a specific release date is given and 
 kept, but that information about the tasks to be completed is published. 
   The process around building CentOS has traditionally been very 
 secretive, which makes the name *Community* Enterprise OS seem very inapt.
 
 SL is not so much lauded, I think, as discussed right now because users 
 who want a rebuild of RHEL 6.0 have no other option.  There is no beta 
 of CentOS for them to install and review (which would make contribution 
 significantly easier).  Users are trying to figure out whether or not it 
 makes sense for them to wait for CentOS 6.0 or use something that's 
 available now.  Because they have very little insight into the process 
 or progress that has been made, they cannot easily evaluate that 
 question.  It is reasonable for this to produce a great deal of anxiety.
 
 As I showed in the list of release dates, CentOS and SL have almost
 always been fairly close (CentOS usually a little quicker). So why the
 claim that CentOS is getting worse on release dates? (General claim,
 not specifically yours.)
 
 Look at wikipedia's page describing CentOS.  They include a column for 
 the delay between the upstream release and CentOS's.  For the 5 series, 
 it looks like:
 
 Release Delay
 5 28d
 5.1   25d
 5.2   34d
 5.3   69d
 5.4   49d
 5.5   44d
 5.6   85d
 
 Almost every release in the 5 series took longer than the initial 
 release for 5.0.  Even if you ignore the release of 5.6, there is a 
 generally upward trend in the amount of time taken for each release. 
 How could anyone reasonably claim that CentOS is NOT getting worse on 
 release dates?
 
 I can't even begin to comprehend the logical failure behind the idea 
 that because SL and CentOS are keeping up with each other that CentOS is 
 not getting worse.  Again, Dag interjected only to ask why any 
 reasonable person would expect 6.1 to take only one month when 5.6 took 
 three.  The fact that there is a general trend toward longer release 
 delays supports that question.
 
 I see no pattern in the release dates to
 indicate CentOS is generally falling behind SL.

Where is Ubuntu telling people exactly where they stand on producing a
their new releases.

What about Red Hat ... how about Fedora.

Is there someplace I do not know about where these distributions tell
you what they are having trouble building?

Show me another list where the developers interact with the users as
much as this one.

CentOS has never been secretive.  We published examples of our build
scripts for the RPMs and the disros, the mock we use and plague.
Something Red Hat has never done.

We have never been secretive.  I even posted the hidden build requirements.

What the hell is secretive about the process ... I have had it with this
list.

Screw it ... I quit.

Where is the SELS



signature.asc
Description: OpenPGP digital signature
___
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@centos.org
http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos


Re: [CentOS] EL 6 rollout strategies? (Scientific Linux)

2011-05-15 Thread Ron Blizzard
On Sun, May 15, 2011 at 5:12 PM, Gordon Messmer yiny...@eburg.com wrote:

 Look at wikipedia's page describing CentOS.  They include a column for
 the delay between the upstream release and CentOS's.  For the 5 series,
 it looks like:

 Release Delay
 5       28d
 5.1     25d
 5.2     34d
 5.3     69d
 5.4     49d
 5.5     44d
 5.6     85d

 Almost every release in the 5 series took longer than the initial
 release for 5.0.  Even if you ignore the release of 5.6, there is a
 generally upward trend in the amount of time taken for each release.
 How could anyone reasonably claim that CentOS is NOT getting worse on
 release dates?

So, when you take 5.6 out of the mix (taking into account the three
releases at once), the average time from Red Hat 5.x release to CentOS
5.x release is 41.5 days. And 5.5 was 44 days. Your point? Up until
5.6 the longest it took for a CentOS 5.x release was 69 days, 5.4 took
49 days and 5.5 took 44 days. Is that going up or down? Take 5.3 out
of the mix (as well as the three-release 5.6) and you've got an
average of 36 days. Just barely over a month. Even with 5.3 it
averages about a month and a half. 5.6 (and 5.3) were the aberrations,
not the average. Thanks for the figures. They don't prove your point.

 I can't even begin to comprehend the logical failure behind the idea
 that because SL and CentOS are keeping up with each other that CentOS is
 not getting worse.  Again, Dag interjected only to ask why any
 reasonable person would expect 6.1 to take only one month when 5.6 took
 three.  The fact that there is a general trend toward longer release
 delays supports that question.

Again, three releases at once. Up until then, the previous two 5.x
releases came down in the number of days between upstream release and
CentOS rebuild. You've got the facts right in front of your nose and
you still get it wrong. And I don't know what happened at release 5.3,
but SL took 57 days on that one -- so I'm guessing something was added
to the mix.

 That's fine, but that's not what's being discussed.

So, on average (without 5.6) less than a month a half per release --
so a month for 6.1 is not that far off.

-- 
RonB -- Using CentOS 5.6
___
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@centos.org
http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos


Re: [CentOS] EL 6 rollout strategies? (Scientific Linux)

2011-05-14 Thread Ljubomir Ljubojevic
Tom H wrote:
 On Fri, May 13, 2011 at 8:50 PM, Christopher Chan
 christopher.c...@bradbury.edu.hk wrote:
 On Saturday, May 14, 2011 01:30 AM, Craig White wrote:

 CentOS has always been a take it or leave it proposition and thus nothing 
 has really changed
 except that many businesses have become reliant upon it and I see my 
 company and many
 other companies turning to Ubuntu not just because of the slow turnaround 
 by CentOS but
 upstream's long window between releases. Surely anyone who is supporting 
 Ruby on Rails
 (or PHP prior to the PHP 5.3 update in the 5.6 update) understands the 
 issue.
 You want to go Ubuntu 'LTS'? Be my guest. Yeah, they have a lot more
 packages by default but don't expect any backports or what not for their
 crap.
 
 There are advantages and disadvantages to installing the latest Ubuntu
 (or Fedora) on the desktop rather than CentOS, but Ubuntu's not crap
 on the server-side. You have an X-less Debian testing install with
 plymouth and upstart; testing might not inspire you with confidence
 but it's proven to be very stable up to now. They freeze Debian
 imports four months before release so they have enough time to
 stabilize the release.
 
 Ubuntu does have backports (I've never used them though). For example,
 for the current LTS:
 http://packages.ubuntu.com/lucid-backports/
 
 My clients who switch from CentOS (I was supporting almost 100% CentOS
 a few years ago but the Debian and Ubuntu share - especially Ubuntu -
 is growing quickly) do so because it's in vogue (my interpretation)
 and because the packages are more recent than CentOS's. They often
 don't even care about LTS!
 ___
 CentOS mailing list
 CentOS@centos.org
 http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos
 
 
Most of us use CentOS/RHEL for servers BECAUSE it is not updated 
constanly with new versions. Having bunch of noobs (server owners and 
admins with Windows desktops) liking something doesn't make them right 
or smart, just fashionable.
Can you take this off-list? I am REALLY tired of reading non-CentOS stuff.
___
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@centos.org
http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos


Re: [CentOS] EL 6 rollout strategies? (Scientific Linux)

2011-05-13 Thread Craig White

On May 12, 2011, at 4:47 PM, Ron Blizzard wrote:

 On Thu, May 12, 2011 at 10:09 AM, Craig White craig.wh...@ttiltd.com wrote:
 
 On May 12, 2011, at 2:05 AM, Ron Blizzard wrote:
 
 On Thu, May 12, 2011 at 1:08 AM, Mark Bradbury mark.bradb...@gmail.com 
 wrote:
 
 
 Do you expect the C6.0 - C6.1 differences to be more complex, or less
 complex than the C5.5 - C5.6 differences ?
 
 And given that C5.6 took 3 months, are there any reasons why C6.1 would
 take no more than 1 month ?
 
 Get over yourself Dag ... for goodness sake.
 
 
 
 
 Why? seems like a valid point to me.
 
 But at that time there should only be one point release on the table,
 instead of two point releases and one major release. Is everyone
 forgetting that 4.9, 5.6 and 6.0 were all out at the same time?
 
 I think you are confusing overlap with simultaneous.
 
  • 2011-02-16: Distribution Release: Red Hat Enterprise Linux 4.9
  • 2011-01-13: Distribution Release: Red Hat Enterprise Linux 5.6
  • 2010-11-10: Distribution Release: Red Hat Enterprise Linux 6
 
 2 months elapsed from release of 6.0 before 5.6 and more than another month 
 before 4.9
 
 Hardly qualifies at the same time unless you consider 3 months to be 
 essentially the same time.
 
 Same time frame, if you want to be technical. As we've seen, work
 started on CentOS 6 and was suspended while the developers worked on
 4.9 and 5.6. So, during the same time frame, two point releases and
 a major release all needed to be done. Sorry I didn't carefully choose
 my words or go into lawyer speak mode.

6 months? Beta for 6.1 already is out? Do you actually think carefully chosen 
words or the notion of interim point releases is really meaningful to people 
who have been waiting for 6? 

 
 And, has been noted, Scientific Linux gave preference to 6.0 and, as
 of yet, still have not completed 5.6. It's not often that either
 development team gets hit with a triple whammy like this. Scientific
 Linux chose one path, CentOS chose another. Personally I happen to
 agree with CentOS' choice here.

CentOS has always been a take it or leave it proposition and thus nothing has 
really changed except that many businesses have become reliant upon it and I 
see my company and many other companies turning to Ubuntu not just because of 
the slow turnaround by CentOS but upstream's long window between releases. 
Surely anyone who is supporting Ruby on Rails (or PHP prior to the PHP 5.3 
update in the 5.6 update) understands the issue.

Lastly, Johnny has made clear that this is not supposed to be an SL discussion 
list but curiously enough, SL is invoked by those who want to use SL to justify 
the alacrity of the CentOS 6.0 release. As was pointed out, though their 5.6 
update was slow or apparently still not out, the updates all came out long ago 
so what you are actually referring to was the set of installation discs that 
are only really needed by people who want to install on newly supported 
hardware.

Craig
___
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@centos.org
http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos


Re: [CentOS] EL 6 rollout strategies? (Scientific Linux)

2011-05-13 Thread Ron Blizzard
On Fri, May 13, 2011 at 12:30 PM, Craig White craig.wh...@ttiltd.com wrote:

 Lastly, Johnny has made clear that this is not supposed to be an SL 
 discussion list but curiously enough, SL is invoked by those who want to use 
 SL to justify the alacrity of the CentOS 6.0 release. As was pointed out, 
 though their 5.6 update was slow or apparently still not out, the updates 
 all came out long ago so what you are actually referring to was the set of 
 installation discs that are only really needed by people who want to install 
 on newly supported hardware. 

Give me a break. Comparing SL and CentOS release dates is not the same
as saying I've moved to SL, but I'm still going to come to the CentOS
mailing list and bitch about it for the rest of my life. My point is
that both CentOS and SL had to deal with two point releases and a
major release all at the same time... err... in the same time frame.
They each chose to handle the situation differently, and it appears
that both will *finish* their three releases at approximately the same
time. This is an exceptional case, it doesn't happen very often. By
it's very nature a rebuild's distribution release *must* be delayed
from its upstream release. Most CentOS users understand and accept
this. So, if you *must* have the newest, cutting edge, release
*immediately* you're going to need to license the upstream product. If
you want to call that a take it or leave it proposition, then use
that phrase. Personally I see it as simply bowing to the dictates of
reality.

-- 
RonB -- Using CentOS 5.6
___
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@centos.org
http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos


Re: [CentOS] EL 6 rollout strategies? (Scientific Linux)

2011-05-13 Thread Christopher Chan
On Saturday, May 14, 2011 01:30 AM, Craig White wrote:

 CentOS has always been a take it or leave it proposition and thus nothing has 
 really changed except that many businesses have become reliant upon it and I 
 see my company and many other companies turning to Ubuntu not just because of 
 the slow turnaround by CentOS but upstream's long window between releases. 
 Surely anyone who is supporting Ruby on Rails (or PHP prior to the PHP 5.3 
 update in the 5.6 update) understands the issue.


You want to go Ubuntu 'LTS'? Be my guest. Yeah, they have a lot more 
packages by default but don't expect any backports or what not for their 
crap.
___
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@centos.org
http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos


  1   2   >