Michael: I cannot tell if you're being sarcastic or not, so, I'm running with 
your words:

Software isn't developed in a vacuum - when truly useful, it's intended use it 
to be used and it cannot be used sans distros (in any realistic production 
operation; sure you can compile everything from source and create StroderOS).
While you may be blessed with using whatever software, from whatever source you 
desire, with any (or no) support available, many system administrators are 
under edicts and must work within the policies and instructions of their 
company.

SOX is a big deal at any organization that is publicly traded or works with 
government entities.

The support model of essentially "it's not the latest; go away until you update 
(compile it)" isn't helpful.

As for the request that started this thread; he was after information (on how 
to get performance related information), not 'please tell me what is broken in 
my environment':
  "Is there a way to log the time each operation took?" ... "The point is to 
find which search operations a taking long time to develop a solution."
Which generated only one (useful) response:
  Quanah: "I would highly advise upgrading to a current release (2.4.36) and 
switching to back-mdb."

If the information Casper requested isn't available, say so. If it is, how 
would he get it?

Either way "upgrade to the latest" doesn’t address his actual question(s).

Continuous improvement is an excellent goal, but I don't see how answering 
questions on "not very recent" versions is a bad thing.

- chris

PS: Just my  2 cents.

-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected] 
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Michael Ströder
Sent: Friday, September 06, 2013 11:37 AM
To: [email protected]
Cc: [email protected]
Subject: Re: Antw: Re: Log service time?

Покотиленко Костик wrote:
> The reason is that openldap's PATCH component includes new features
> (that by itself introduces new bugs) rather than only FIXES to existing
> features. This breaks disto's policy and this is the point.

Distribution policy does not matter here.
What matters is continous improvement of OpenLDAP itself.

Ciao, Michael.


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