Jason Azze <ja...@azze.org>: > > The thing about these users is they're intensely conservative. They > > won't buy a time service implementation that doesn't reassure them by > > looking and smelling like what they're used to. > > This is why I try to make noise when things are broken on RHEL/CentOS > 6.x. I don't see a builder for that OS on buildbot.ntpsec.org. The Red > Hat Enterprise family (RHEL, CentOS, Scientific Linux, Oracle > Enterprise Linux) and SuSE Linux Enterprise Server are where we > boring, conservative sysadmins like to live. There are a lot of us who > haven't moved off of RHEL 6 (supported through 2020) for critical > infrastructure because RHEL 7 went systemd on us.
OK, then this is a good time to ponder the big question: from your P.O.V. are we doing enough to support 6.X? If not, what needs to be fixed? I agree this is important and am sure Mark will too. > Perhaps there should be a separate discussion about supported > platforms: Where does the project claim the software will compile and > where does it claim the software will run (and are those two lists > different)? Can't see why they ought to be. Here's what the INSTALL file has to say: This software should build on any operating system conformant to POSIX.1-2001 and ISO/IEC 9899:1999 (C99). In addition, the operating system must have either a Linux-like adjtimex(2) call or a BSD-like pair of ntp_gettime(2)/ntp_adjtime(2) calls. There are some prerequisites. Libraries need the library installed to run and in addition, the development headers installed to build. Python 2.x, x >= 5 bison libevent 2.x libcap OpenSSL GNU readline BSD libedit sys/timepps.h asciidoc, a2x We also claim Mac OS X. Hmmmm. Daniel, shouldn't that OpenSSL be replaced by libsodium? Please write up an entry on that. -- <a href="http://www.catb.org/~esr/">Eric S. Raymond</a> _______________________________________________ devel mailing list devel@ntpsec.org http://lists.ntpsec.org/mailman/listinfo/devel