2013/1/24 Magnus Hagander <mag...@hagander.net>: > On Thu, Jan 24, 2013 at 10:11 AM, Kohei KaiGai <kai...@kaigai.gr.jp> wrote: >> 2013/1/24 Tom Lane <t...@sss.pgh.pa.us>: >>> John R Pierce <pie...@hogranch.com> writes: >>>> On 1/23/2013 8:32 PM, Tom Lane wrote: >>>>> FWIW, in Fedora-land I see: ... >>> >>>> I'd be far more interested in what is in RHEL and CentOS. Fedora, >>>> with its 6 month obsolescence cycle, is of zero interest to me for >>>> deploying database servers. >>> >>> But of course Fedora is also the upstream that will become RHEL7 >>> and beyond. > > Do we know which version of Fedora will become RHEL7, and thus, which > version of libselinux will go in RHEL7? (And do we know which version > of postgres will go in RHEL7, assuming release schedules hold) > I'm not certain...
>>> It might be that the update timing makes a bigger difference in some >>> other distros, though. To return to Heikki's original point about >>> Debian, what are they shipping today? >>> >> Even though I'm not good at release cycle of Debian, I tried to check >> the shipped version of postgresql and libselinux for stable, testing, >> unstable and experimental release. >> I'm not certain why they don't push postgresql-9.2 into experimental >> release yet. However, it seems to me optimistic libselinux-2.1.10 being >> bundled on the timeline of postgresql-9.3. >> >> If someone familiar with Debian's release cycle, I'd like to see the >> suggestion. >> >> * Debian (stable) ... postgresql-8.4 + libselinux-2.0.96 >> http://packages.debian.org/en/squeeze/postgresql >> http://packages.debian.org/en/source/squeeze/libselinux >> >> * Debian (testing) ... postgresql-9.1 + libselinux-2.1.9 >> http://packages.debian.org/en/wheezy/postgresql >> http://packages.debian.org/en/source/wheezy/libselinux > > Just as a note, wheezy is the version that will be the next debian > stable, and it's in freeze since quite a while back. So we can safely > expect it will be 2.1.9 that's included in the next debian stable. > It seems to me this means pgsql-9.1 shall be bundled with libselinux-2.1.9, but not pgsql-9.3, so here is no matter. When pgsql-9.3 is released, Fedora 17 will exceed end-of-life. Debian already releases libselinux-2.1.12 on experimental package even though its pgsql is 9.1. Is it too optimistic estimation? Thanks, -- KaiGai Kohei <kai...@kaigai.gr.jp> -- Sent via pgsql-hackers mailing list (pgsql-hackers@postgresql.org) To make changes to your subscription: http://www.postgresql.org/mailpref/pgsql-hackers