Anyone else on the verge of tears after reading today's CentOS blog post?
https://urldefense.proofpoint.com/v2/url?u=https-3A__blog.centos.org_2020_12_future-2Dis-2Dcentos-2Dstream_&d=DwICaQ&c=gRgGjJ3BkIsb5y6s49QqsA&r=gd8BzeSQcySVxr0gDWSEbN-P-pgDXkdyCtaMqdCgPPdW1cyL5RIpaIYrCn8C5x2A&m=t2J9jUFVgun90FIMquH4QRfvlPyoP8v5iYSZEcA87_g&s=-5u1jeYbTrmg0sZScxVN-0qJ1ifC2BEGlmW4_B70SYw&e= If you don't know CentOS Stream, it's "upstream RHEL". No, not Fedora. Yes, that too is "upstream RHEL". CentOS Stream a rolling release (so good luck getting long term steady kernels/packages) that is trying to be Arch like but with RHEL flavor. It sits in between RHEL and Fedora. It isn't and won't track steady releases like RHEL. It will have things before RHEL, except for security patches which will still come in whenever someone gets around to it. And, no, they still won't tag their security patches as such because they expect you to apply patches (and potentially reboot) at their whim.

For those of us in the scientific community who have packages from vendors that standardize on RHEL dot releases, I'm not sure what we're going to do. We have RHEL licensing on the important infrastructure nodes but the hundreds of compute nodes, VM's, dev systems, and misc? Going all RHEL would kill our budget. And I don't care if Oracle Linux is free or how good of a clone it is, you only get burned by Oracle once (and you are usually to broke to be burned a second time).

I suppose we can shift nearly all of our infrastructure to Ubuntu LTS but there's a lot still left that I'm not sure we can move to CentOS Stream nor can we afford to go to RHEL. Guess we are freezing our conversations about moving away from SL7 and have year to figure it out then make it happen...

*sigh*

~Stack~

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