On 04/05/2018 04:05 AM, Daniel P. Berrangé wrote:
Described how we decide which host platforms to support for libvirt,
which in turn makes it easier to decide when a platform / software
version can be dropped.

Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrangé <berra...@redhat.com>
---
  docs/index.html.in     |   2 +-
  docs/platforms.html.in | 105 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
  2 files changed, 106 insertions(+), 1 deletion(-)
  create mode 100644 docs/platforms.html.in

diff --git a/docs/index.html.in b/docs/index.html.in
index 1b3a7a3db6..4783c39e3c 100644
--- a/docs/index.html.in
+++ b/docs/index.html.in
@@ -28,7 +28,7 @@
          The libvirt project:
        </p>
        <ul>
-        <li>is a toolkit to manage virtualization hosts</li>
+        <li>is a toolkit to manage <a href="platforms.html.in">virtualization 
platforms</a></li>
          <li>is accessible from C, Python, Perl, Java and more</li>
          <li>is licensed under open source licenses</li>
          <li>supports <a href="drvqemu.html">KVM</a>,
diff --git a/docs/platforms.html.in b/docs/platforms.html.in
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..776e930e78
--- /dev/null
+++ b/docs/platforms.html.in
@@ -0,0 +1,105 @@
+<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
+<!DOCTYPE html>
+<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml";>
+  <body>
+    <h1>Supported host platforms</h1>
+
+    <ul id="toc"></ul>
+
+    <h2>Build targets</h2>
+
+    <p>
+      Libvirt drivers aim to support building and executing on multiple
+      host OS platforms. This document outlines which platforms are the
+      major build targets. These platforms are used as the basis for deciding
+      upon the minimum required versions of 3rd party software libvirt depends
+      on. If a platform is not listed here, it does not imply that libvirt
+      won't work. If an unlisted platform has comparable software versions
+      to a listed platform, there is every expectation that it will work.
+      Bug reports are welcome for problems encountered on unlisted platforms
+      unless they are clearly older vintage that what is described here.
+    </p>
+
+    <p>
+      Note that when considering software versions shipped in distros as
+      support targets, libvirt considers only the version number, and assumes
+      the features in that distro match the upstream release with the same
+      version. IOW, if a distro backports extra features to the software in
+      their distro, libvirt upstream code will not add explicit support for
+      those backports, unless the feature is auto-detectable in a manner that
+      works for the upstream releases too.
+    </p>
+
+    <p>
+      The Repology site is a useful resource to identify currently shipped
+      versions of software in various operating systems, though it does not
+      cover all distros listed below.
+    </p>
+
+    <ul>
+      <li><a 
href="https://repology.org/metapackage/libvirt/versions";>libvirt</a></li>
+      <li><a 
href="https://repology.org/metapackage/qemu/versions";>qemu</a></li>
+    </ul>
+
+
+    <h3>Linux OS</h3>
+
+    <p>
+      For distributions with frequent, short-lifetime releases, the project
+      will aim to support all versions that are not end of life by their
+      respective vendors. For the purposes of identifying supported software
+      versions, the project will look at Fedora, Ubuntu &amp; OpenSUSE distros.

openSUSE

Regards,
Jim

+      Other short-lifetime distros will be assumed to ship similar software
+      versions.
+    </p>
+
+    <p>
+      For distributions with long-lifetime releases, the project will aim to
+      support the most recent major version at all times. Support for the
+      previous major version will be dropped 2 years after the new major
+      version is released. For the purposes of identifying supported software
+      versions, the project will look at RHEL, Debian, Ubuntu LTS &amp; SLES
+      distros. Other long-lifetime distros will be assumed to ship similar
+      software versions.
+    </p>
+
+    <h3>Windows</h3>
+
+    <p>
+      The project supports building with current versions of the MinGW
+      toolchain, hosted on Linux.
+    </p>
+
+    <h3>macOS</h3>
+
+    <p>
+      The project supports building with the current version of macOS,
+      with the current homebrew package set available.
+    </p>
+
+    <h3>FreeBSD</h3>
+
+    <p>
+      The project aims to support the most recent major version
+      at all times. Support for the previous major version will
+      be dropped 2 years after the new major version is released.
+    </p>
+
+    <h2>Virtualization platforms</h2>
+
+    <p>
+      For <a href="drivers.html">hypervisor drivers</a> which execute
+      locally (QEMU, LXC, VZ, libxl, etc), the set of supported operating
+      system platforms listed above will inform choices as to the minimum
+      required versions of 3rd party libraries and hypervisor management
+      APIs.
+    </p>
+    <p>
+      If a hypervisor is not commonly shipped directly by any distro
+      listed above, (VMware ESX, HyperV, VZ), the project aims to
+      support versions up to 5 years, or until the vendor discontinues
+      support, whichever comes first.
+    </p>
+
+  </body>
+</html>


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