Re: [CentOS] Blog article: CentOS is NOT dead

2020-12-16 Thread Valeri Galtsev


On 12/16/2020 12:09 PM, Lamar Owen wrote:

On 12/14/20 10:54 AM, Yves Bellefeuille wrote:


The article states that CentOS will now be "upstream" of RHEL instead 
of "downstream". This is strange to me. I never thought CentOS was 
upstream or downstream of RHEL; I always thought it *was* RHEL -- 
perhaps a little delayed, but that's not the same as being "downstream". 


CentOS has always been 'downstream' of RHEL.  The CentOS team rebuilt 
the source packages with the goal of getting as close as possible to 
what RHEL shipped, but it has never been 100% identical.  You can do 
the same by pulling all of the package contents from git.centos.org 
and build the sources in the correct order with the correct software 
and the correct options to rpmbuild.  Building from git.centos.org is 
not really hard at all; what is hard is figuring out the order and 
figuring out the other bits you might need that aren't necessarily on 
git.centos.org. Building from git is documented at 
https://wiki.centos.org/Sources?highlight=(git.centos.org) and you can 
look at an example of how I rebuilt a CentOS 8 RPM to get a 
non-distributed subpackage rebuilt at 
https://forums.centos.org/viewtopic.php?f=54=73376=314200#p314200


CentOS has never *been* actual RHEL.

It's also clear that Red Hat didn't understand the importance of the 
10-year support period.


If they didn't understand it, they wouldn't offer it for RHEL. They 
just believe that if you need that you should pay something for it.


Yes and no. Yes, in a sense that RedHat always meticulously followed 
requirements of GPL, and was putting sources of their "derivative" work 
of backporting as srpms. And "paid" meant putting effort into correctly 
rebuilding everything, so yes, what we used (roughly called "binary 
replica" if RHEL) in fact was paid by downstream vendors' efforts.


No, in a sense, RedHat never had, and shouldn't have been expecting 
being paid for just following GPL letter and having source RPMs freely 
available. A always praised them for always following GPL.


With utmost respect,

And fully agreeing with the rest of your post,

Valeri

A 10-year support lifespan, even doing a straight rebuild of the 
packages from RHEL, has a huge cost, and someone has to pay those 
costs. Should Red Hat's paying customer base subsidize those costs? 
(if you say 'Red Hat should pay for it' that actually means you think 
Red Hat's paying customers should pay for it, because that's where Red 
Hat's money comes from).  In the case of Oracle Linux, Oracle has 
decided that yes, their paying support customers should subsidize the 
cost for those who aren't paying.  Someone, somewhere, must pay the 
costs; in a volunteer project the volunteers typically pay the labor 
cost themselves, and in many cases pay the cost of the compute 
hardware, bandwidth, and electricity required; these are not small 
costs, and someone, somewhere, must pay them.  If the costs aren't 
adequately covered, the project's deliverables suffer, and users 
complain.


It really just boils down to a cost without a tangible return on 
investment.  It remains to be seen if the intangible ROI was as large 
as the vocal reaction to the transition announcement would imply.


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Re: [CentOS] Blog article: CentOS is NOT dead

2020-12-16 Thread Lamar Owen

On 12/14/20 10:54 AM, Yves Bellefeuille wrote:


The article states that CentOS will now be "upstream" of RHEL instead 
of "downstream". This is strange to me. I never thought CentOS was 
upstream or downstream of RHEL; I always thought it *was* RHEL -- 
perhaps a little delayed, but that's not the same as being "downstream". 


CentOS has always been 'downstream' of RHEL.  The CentOS team rebuilt 
the source packages with the goal of getting as close as possible to 
what RHEL shipped, but it has never been 100% identical.  You can do the 
same by pulling all of the package contents from git.centos.org and 
build the sources in the correct order with the correct software and the 
correct options to rpmbuild.  Building from git.centos.org is not really 
hard at all; what is hard is figuring out the order and figuring out the 
other bits you might need that aren't necessarily on git.centos.org. 
Building from git is documented at 
https://wiki.centos.org/Sources?highlight=(git.centos.org) and you can 
look at an example of how I rebuilt a CentOS 8 RPM to get a 
non-distributed subpackage rebuilt at 
https://forums.centos.org/viewtopic.php?f=54=73376=314200#p314200


CentOS has never *been* actual RHEL.

It's also clear that Red Hat didn't understand the importance of the 
10-year support period.


If they didn't understand it, they wouldn't offer it for RHEL.  They 
just believe that if you need that you should pay something for it. A 
10-year support lifespan, even doing a straight rebuild of the packages 
from RHEL, has a huge cost, and someone has to pay those costs. Should 
Red Hat's paying customer base subsidize those costs? (if you say 'Red 
Hat should pay for it' that actually means you think Red Hat's paying 
customers should pay for it, because that's where Red Hat's money comes 
from).  In the case of Oracle Linux, Oracle has decided that yes, their 
paying support customers should subsidize the cost for those who aren't 
paying.  Someone, somewhere, must pay the costs; in a volunteer project 
the volunteers typically pay the labor cost themselves, and in many 
cases pay the cost of the compute hardware, bandwidth, and electricity 
required; these are not small costs, and someone, somewhere, must pay 
them.  If the costs aren't adequately covered, the project's 
deliverables suffer, and users complain.


It really just boils down to a cost without a tangible return on 
investment.  It remains to be seen if the intangible ROI was as large as 
the vocal reaction to the transition announcement would imply.


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Re: [CentOS] Blog article: CentOS is NOT dead

2020-12-16 Thread Bernstein, Noam CIV USN NRL (6393) Washington DC (USA) via CentOS
On Dec 16, 2020, at 11:54 AM, Johnny Hughes  wrote:

> Even out side the maintenance phase .. there will be some bugs that will
> get incorporated into the next point release.  Those should be in Stream
> first.
>
> There will never be another 'downstream rhel source code build' done by
> Red Hat.  This is just not in the cards.

Yes, but the ones that were in the "current" point release were in Stream 
earlier, right?  Is it really that hard to just label them as such (and maybe 
not delete them from the repo) ?

Noam
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Re: [CentOS] Blog article: CentOS is NOT dead

2020-12-16 Thread Johnny Hughes
On 12/16/20 10:47 AM, James Pearson wrote:
> Johnny Hughes:
>>>
>>> As others have said, it misses the _really_ important bit about the 
>>> traditional CentOS model which is to follow the RHEL ~10 year life cycle
>>> It doesn't matter how good/rock solid/whatever CentOS Stream turns out to 
>>> be, but if it only has a 5 year life cycle for each major release,
>>> then it no good to me (and I suspect many others)
>>
>> There is a 2 year overlap with the next version of stream as well .. in
>> this case CentOS Stream 9.  How long is Debian or Ubuntu LTS maintained
>> for free?
> 
> I don't use Debian or Ubuntu LTS, so have no idea
> 
>> 5 years may not be long enough for you .. but it certainly pretty long.
>> And I am TRYING to get that extended.  I may not be successful, we'll
>> have to see.
> 
> Why not just have CentOS Stream revert to using whatever RPMS are released 
> for the matching RHEL major release when it is in the maintenance part of its 
> lifecycle?
> 

Even out side the maintenance phase .. there will be some bugs that will
get incorporated into the next point release.  Those should be in Stream
first.

There will never be another 'downstream rhel source code build' done by
Red Hat.  This is just not in the cards.


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Re: [CentOS] Blog article: CentOS is NOT dead

2020-12-16 Thread James Pearson
Johnny Hughes:
>>
>> As others have said, it misses the _really_ important bit about the 
>> traditional CentOS model which is to follow the RHEL ~10 year life cycle
>> It doesn't matter how good/rock solid/whatever CentOS Stream turns out to 
>> be, but if it only has a 5 year life cycle for each major release,
>> then it no good to me (and I suspect many others)
>
> There is a 2 year overlap with the next version of stream as well .. in
> this case CentOS Stream 9.  How long is Debian or Ubuntu LTS maintained
> for free?

I don't use Debian or Ubuntu LTS, so have no idea

> 5 years may not be long enough for you .. but it certainly pretty long.
> And I am TRYING to get that extended.  I may not be successful, we'll
> have to see.

Why not just have CentOS Stream revert to using whatever RPMS are released for 
the matching RHEL major release when it is in the maintenance part of its 
lifecycle?

James Pearson
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Re: [CentOS] Blog article: CentOS is NOT dead

2020-12-15 Thread Johnny Hughes
On 12/15/20 6:30 PM, R C wrote:
> 
> On 12/15/20 3:04 PM, Johnny Hughes wrote:
>>
>> If you want a RHEL clone, that's fine.  There will be one available.
>> Someone will make one.
> 
> Once IBM owns it?  You think?  They allowed cloning once ..  a long time
> ago.
> 

How many people have to tell you this had nothing to do with IBM?  You
sure have a lot of inside information.


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Re: [CentOS] Blog article: CentOS is NOT dead

2020-12-15 Thread R C


On 12/15/20 3:04 PM, Johnny Hughes wrote:


If you want a RHEL clone, that's fine.  There will be one available.
Someone will make one.


Once IBM owns it?  You think?  They allowed cloning once ..  a long time 
ago.







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Re: [CentOS] Blog article: CentOS is NOT dead

2020-12-15 Thread R C


On 12/15/20 4:11 PM, Phelps, Matthew wrote:

On Tue, Dec 15, 2020 at 5:04 PM Johnny Hughes  wrote:


On 12/14/20 8:25 AM, James Pearson wrote:

Nicolas Kovacs

Here's an interesting read which makes a point for CentOS Stream:



https://freedomben.medium.com/centos-is-not-dead-please-stop-saying-it-is-at-least-until-you-read-this-4b26b5c44877

tl;dr: Communication about Stream was BAD, but Stream itself might be a

good

thing. Here's why.

As others have said, it misses the _really_ important bit about the

traditional CentOS model which is to follow the RHEL ~10 year life cycle>

It doesn't matter how good/rock solid/whatever CentOS Stream turns out

to be, but if it only has a 5 year life cycle for each major release, then
it no good to me (and I suspect many others)

There is a 2 year overlap with the next version of stream as well .. in
this case CentOS Stream 9.  How long is Debian or Ubuntu LTS maintained
for free?

5 years may not be long enough for you .. but it certainly pretty long.
  And I am TRYING to get that extended.  I may not be successful, we'll
have to see.


The article also mentions "CentOS will no longer be old, crusty, and

barely alive, trailing RHEL by months at times" - then why didn't Redhat
put resources into CentOS to improve that?
Do you have any idea how much money Red Hat is paying to maintain
CentOS.  And they are maintaining CentOS 7, even now, until 2024.  There
are dozens of machines and several administrators to maintain them.


Redhat must have known, that if they killed off traditional CentOS, then

users will simply go elsewhere for a RHEL rebuild ?

If you chose not to use CentOS Stream, that is up to you.  What is the
OS of your TV set.  What is the firmware of your computer.  Those things
are now pretty much irrelevant and commoditized.

At some point the underlying OS is going to be much less important and
the important part will be the layered parts that contain your apps and
not the OS Layer.

If you want a RHEL clone, that's fine.  There will be one available.
Someone will make one.

The real and complete vision of what CentOS Stream will become will not
be compolete until around the end of QTR1 2021.  If you chose not to try
it, that is up to you.   I truly think Stream will be a much better and
more quickly fixed OS when everything is in place.


I don't expect you to answer Johnny, but why didn't Red Hat wait until
Stream was "complete'" or ready, or whatever.


I know the above wasn't directed at me, but maybe  it wasn't as much 
redhat wanting to sell, but IBM wanting to buy (there is a difference).


IBM's revenue has steadily and steeply been going down, it had quite a 
few train wrecks, topped off with plane crashes. IBM is still a very 
large company, and still makes A LOT of money but for a large part with 
a bunch of dinosaurs that they are stuck with, and someone spotted a meteor.








I agree that Redhat really screwed up this announcement - they would

have got a lot more kudos if they had announced CentOS Stream to exist
along with keeping the current traditional CentOS ...
Again .. pay 8 or more people the going rate to just maintain CentOS.
Buy the dozens of machines and pay for the datacenter, bandwidth,
hardware services for machines, etc.  This is very expensive.  Maybe the
company you work for will do that out of the goodness of their heart?



I guess I don't understand. Isn't Red Hat going to pay for CentOS Stream
engineers, hardware, etc? How much more would it be to use them to build
point releases? Won't much of the personnel and infrastructure be the same?
Is Red Hat going to just get rid of all the CentOS resources? I don't
understand why the resources maintaining CentOS 7, and 8 Stream, can't be
used to build CentOS 8.4/5 etc?

As bummed out as I am about this whole situation, and believe me i am.

But even I can clearly see that Red Hat has gone above and beyond the
requirements of open source software and I am quite tired of all the
'they should be happy to pay several million dollars a year to give away
a working product."  If it is so easy or cheap to do .. then you guys do
it.  I did it for 17 years.  Much of my time was on top of a normal 40
hour work week.



Again, we all appreciate it. It's not you we're mad at.



Red Hat contributes to every major upstream project .. they maintain
several very key major projects.  They let employees contribute to
projects and pay for them to work on upstream projects.  how many things
do they have to do for free?


James Pearson





I understand all your points, and I get it, but the fact is Red Hat
committed to the roadmap (c.f.
https://blog.centos.org/2019/07/ibm-red-hat-and-centos/) and now they're
abruptly breaking a promise. One that is affecting a lot of already
overstressed and underpaid people. If they said this would happen at the
beginning of CentOS 8, or better CentOS 9, then fine. But now?

It sucks big time.


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Re: [CentOS] Blog article: CentOS is NOT dead

2020-12-15 Thread Tom Bishop
On Tue, Dec 15, 2020, 5:35 PM Johnny Hughes  wrote:

> On 12/15/20 5:11 PM, Phelps, Matthew wrote:
> > On Tue, Dec 15, 2020 at 5:04 PM Johnny Hughes  wrote:
> >
> >> On 12/14/20 8:25 AM, James Pearson wrote:
> >>> Nicolas Kovacs
> 
>  Here's an interesting read which makes a point for CentOS Stream:
> 
> 
> >>
> https://freedomben.medium.com/centos-is-not-dead-please-stop-saying-it-is-at-least-until-you-read-this-4b26b5c44877
> 
>  tl;dr: Communication about Stream was BAD, but Stream itself might be
> a
> >> good
>  thing. Here's why.
> >>>
> >>> As others have said, it misses the _really_ important bit about the
> >> traditional CentOS model which is to follow the RHEL ~10 year life
> cycle>
> >>> It doesn't matter how good/rock solid/whatever CentOS Stream turns out
> >> to be, but if it only has a 5 year life cycle for each major release,
> then
> >> it no good to me (and I suspect many others)
> >>>
> >>
> >>
> >> There is a 2 year overlap with the next version of stream as well .. in
> >> this case CentOS Stream 9.  How long is Debian or Ubuntu LTS maintained
> >> for free?
> >>
> >> 5 years may not be long enough for you .. but it certainly pretty long.
> >>  And I am TRYING to get that extended.  I may not be successful, we'll
> >> have to see.
> >>
> >>> The article also mentions "CentOS will no longer be old, crusty, and
> >> barely alive, trailing RHEL by months at times" - then why didn't Redhat
> >> put resources into CentOS to improve that?
> >>>
> >>
> >> Do you have any idea how much money Red Hat is paying to maintain
> >> CentOS.  And they are maintaining CentOS 7, even now, until 2024.  There
> >> are dozens of machines and several administrators to maintain them.
> >>
> >>> Redhat must have known, that if they killed off traditional CentOS,
> then
> >> users will simply go elsewhere for a RHEL rebuild ?
> >>
> >> If you chose not to use CentOS Stream, that is up to you.  What is the
> >> OS of your TV set.  What is the firmware of your computer.  Those things
> >> are now pretty much irrelevant and commoditized.
> >>
> >> At some point the underlying OS is going to be much less important and
> >> the important part will be the layered parts that contain your apps and
> >> not the OS Layer.
> >>
> >> If you want a RHEL clone, that's fine.  There will be one available.
> >> Someone will make one.
> >>
> >> The real and complete vision of what CentOS Stream will become will not
> >> be compolete until around the end of QTR1 2021.  If you chose not to try
> >> it, that is up to you.   I truly think Stream will be a much better and
> >> more quickly fixed OS when everything is in place.
> >>
> >
> > I don't expect you to answer Johnny, but why didn't Red Hat wait until
> > Stream was "complete'" or ready, or whatever.
>
> I have no idea.  I am not saying I completely agree with the timing or
> the way this went down.  But we are where we are now.  I still think
> CentOS Stream is as good as any other "Enterprise" distro out there.  I
> think iti si just as good as Debian and/or Ubuntu.
>
>

This is the problem they created, your right stream is "just as good as the
other Enterprise distro's out there." But that is part of the issue, since
your just as good and no longer have the long support cycles then I just as
well spend time porting it to Debian etc.  The way that they did it just
leaves a lot of bad faith in anything that RH has to say now, at least for
me I have lost all trust in anything they have to say. I mean you know it's
bad when people are talking about migrating to Oracle, that's pretty ironic
of all things.

I've been on the list since 2007 and again I appreciate all the hard work
over the years that you and the others have given to the project, it's just
a shame that RH decided to take the path that it taken.

>
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Re: [CentOS] Blog article: CentOS is NOT dead

2020-12-15 Thread Johnny Hughes
On 12/15/20 5:11 PM, Phelps, Matthew wrote:
> On Tue, Dec 15, 2020 at 5:04 PM Johnny Hughes  wrote:
> 
>> On 12/14/20 8:25 AM, James Pearson wrote:
>>> Nicolas Kovacs

 Here's an interesting read which makes a point for CentOS Stream:


>> https://freedomben.medium.com/centos-is-not-dead-please-stop-saying-it-is-at-least-until-you-read-this-4b26b5c44877

 tl;dr: Communication about Stream was BAD, but Stream itself might be a
>> good
 thing. Here's why.
>>>
>>> As others have said, it misses the _really_ important bit about the
>> traditional CentOS model which is to follow the RHEL ~10 year life cycle>
>>> It doesn't matter how good/rock solid/whatever CentOS Stream turns out
>> to be, but if it only has a 5 year life cycle for each major release, then
>> it no good to me (and I suspect many others)
>>>
>>
>>
>> There is a 2 year overlap with the next version of stream as well .. in
>> this case CentOS Stream 9.  How long is Debian or Ubuntu LTS maintained
>> for free?
>>
>> 5 years may not be long enough for you .. but it certainly pretty long.
>>  And I am TRYING to get that extended.  I may not be successful, we'll
>> have to see.
>>
>>> The article also mentions "CentOS will no longer be old, crusty, and
>> barely alive, trailing RHEL by months at times" - then why didn't Redhat
>> put resources into CentOS to improve that?
>>>
>>
>> Do you have any idea how much money Red Hat is paying to maintain
>> CentOS.  And they are maintaining CentOS 7, even now, until 2024.  There
>> are dozens of machines and several administrators to maintain them.
>>
>>> Redhat must have known, that if they killed off traditional CentOS, then
>> users will simply go elsewhere for a RHEL rebuild ?
>>
>> If you chose not to use CentOS Stream, that is up to you.  What is the
>> OS of your TV set.  What is the firmware of your computer.  Those things
>> are now pretty much irrelevant and commoditized.
>>
>> At some point the underlying OS is going to be much less important and
>> the important part will be the layered parts that contain your apps and
>> not the OS Layer.
>>
>> If you want a RHEL clone, that's fine.  There will be one available.
>> Someone will make one.
>>
>> The real and complete vision of what CentOS Stream will become will not
>> be compolete until around the end of QTR1 2021.  If you chose not to try
>> it, that is up to you.   I truly think Stream will be a much better and
>> more quickly fixed OS when everything is in place.
>>
> 
> I don't expect you to answer Johnny, but why didn't Red Hat wait until
> Stream was "complete'" or ready, or whatever.

I have no idea.  I am not saying I completely agree with the timing or
the way this went down.  But we are where we are now.  I still think
CentOS Stream is as good as any other "Enterprise" distro out there.  I
think iti si just as good as Debian and/or Ubuntu.

You guys keep calling it beta .. it is not.

The RHEL team is not grabbing brand new software (like the do in
Rawhide, for example) and trying to roll that into RHEL.  They are going
to do one of three type of updates.

1) A security update

2) A bugfix update.

3) An Enhancement update.

For #1 and #2 .. you want those rolled in and you want them rolled in
ASAP.  RHEAs do not make up that many of the updates.  You are getting
these after QA testing a couple months early at most.

Yes, it will not exactly match RHEL .. but how different is 8.2 to 8.3
.. what things run in 8.2 and not 8.3?  That is the kind of updates you
will be getting.


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Re: [CentOS] Blog article: CentOS is NOT dead

2020-12-15 Thread Phelps, Matthew
On Tue, Dec 15, 2020 at 5:04 PM Johnny Hughes  wrote:

> On 12/14/20 8:25 AM, James Pearson wrote:
> > Nicolas Kovacs
> >>
> >> Here's an interesting read which makes a point for CentOS Stream:
> >>
> >>
> https://freedomben.medium.com/centos-is-not-dead-please-stop-saying-it-is-at-least-until-you-read-this-4b26b5c44877
> >>
> >> tl;dr: Communication about Stream was BAD, but Stream itself might be a
> good
> >> thing. Here's why.
> >
> > As others have said, it misses the _really_ important bit about the
> traditional CentOS model which is to follow the RHEL ~10 year life cycle>
> > It doesn't matter how good/rock solid/whatever CentOS Stream turns out
> to be, but if it only has a 5 year life cycle for each major release, then
> it no good to me (and I suspect many others)
> >
>
>
> There is a 2 year overlap with the next version of stream as well .. in
> this case CentOS Stream 9.  How long is Debian or Ubuntu LTS maintained
> for free?
>
> 5 years may not be long enough for you .. but it certainly pretty long.
>  And I am TRYING to get that extended.  I may not be successful, we'll
> have to see.
>
> > The article also mentions "CentOS will no longer be old, crusty, and
> barely alive, trailing RHEL by months at times" - then why didn't Redhat
> put resources into CentOS to improve that?
> >
>
> Do you have any idea how much money Red Hat is paying to maintain
> CentOS.  And they are maintaining CentOS 7, even now, until 2024.  There
> are dozens of machines and several administrators to maintain them.
>
> > Redhat must have known, that if they killed off traditional CentOS, then
> users will simply go elsewhere for a RHEL rebuild ?
>
> If you chose not to use CentOS Stream, that is up to you.  What is the
> OS of your TV set.  What is the firmware of your computer.  Those things
> are now pretty much irrelevant and commoditized.
>
> At some point the underlying OS is going to be much less important and
> the important part will be the layered parts that contain your apps and
> not the OS Layer.
>
> If you want a RHEL clone, that's fine.  There will be one available.
> Someone will make one.
>
> The real and complete vision of what CentOS Stream will become will not
> be compolete until around the end of QTR1 2021.  If you chose not to try
> it, that is up to you.   I truly think Stream will be a much better and
> more quickly fixed OS when everything is in place.
>

I don't expect you to answer Johnny, but why didn't Red Hat wait until
Stream was "complete'" or ready, or whatever.



> >
> > I agree that Redhat really screwed up this announcement - they would
> have got a lot more kudos if they had announced CentOS Stream to exist
> along with keeping the current traditional CentOS ...
> >
>
> Again .. pay 8 or more people the going rate to just maintain CentOS.
> Buy the dozens of machines and pay for the datacenter, bandwidth,
> hardware services for machines, etc.  This is very expensive.  Maybe the
> company you work for will do that out of the goodness of their heart?
>
>
I guess I don't understand. Isn't Red Hat going to pay for CentOS Stream
engineers, hardware, etc? How much more would it be to use them to build
point releases? Won't much of the personnel and infrastructure be the same?
Is Red Hat going to just get rid of all the CentOS resources? I don't
understand why the resources maintaining CentOS 7, and 8 Stream, can't be
used to build CentOS 8.4/5 etc?

As bummed out as I am about this whole situation, and believe me i am.
> But even I can clearly see that Red Hat has gone above and beyond the
> requirements of open source software and I am quite tired of all the
> 'they should be happy to pay several million dollars a year to give away
> a working product."  If it is so easy or cheap to do .. then you guys do
> it.  I did it for 17 years.  Much of my time was on top of a normal 40
> hour work week.
>
>
Again, we all appreciate it. It's not you we're mad at.


> Red Hat contributes to every major upstream project .. they maintain
> several very key major projects.  They let employees contribute to
> projects and pay for them to work on upstream projects.  how many things
> do they have to do for free?
>
> > James Pearson
>
>
>
>
I understand all your points, and I get it, but the fact is Red Hat
committed to the roadmap (c.f.
https://blog.centos.org/2019/07/ibm-red-hat-and-centos/) and now they're
abruptly breaking a promise. One that is affecting a lot of already
overstressed and underpaid people. If they said this would happen at the
beginning of CentOS 8, or better CentOS 9, then fine. But now?

It sucks big time.

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*Information Technology Specialist, Systems Administrator*

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Re: [CentOS] Blog article: CentOS is NOT dead

2020-12-15 Thread Johnny Hughes
On 12/14/20 8:25 AM, James Pearson wrote:
> Nicolas Kovacs 
>>
>> Here's an interesting read which makes a point for CentOS Stream:
>>
>> https://freedomben.medium.com/centos-is-not-dead-please-stop-saying-it-is-at-least-until-you-read-this-4b26b5c44877
>>
>> tl;dr: Communication about Stream was BAD, but Stream itself might be a good
>> thing. Here's why.
> 
> As others have said, it misses the _really_ important bit about the 
> traditional CentOS model which is to follow the RHEL ~10 year life cycle>
> It doesn't matter how good/rock solid/whatever CentOS Stream turns out to be, 
> but if it only has a 5 year life cycle for each major release, then it no 
> good to me (and I suspect many others)
>


There is a 2 year overlap with the next version of stream as well .. in
this case CentOS Stream 9.  How long is Debian or Ubuntu LTS maintained
for free?

5 years may not be long enough for you .. but it certainly pretty long.
 And I am TRYING to get that extended.  I may not be successful, we'll
have to see.

> The article also mentions "CentOS will no longer be old, crusty, and barely 
> alive, trailing RHEL by months at times" - then why didn't Redhat put 
> resources into CentOS to improve that?
> 

Do you have any idea how much money Red Hat is paying to maintain
CentOS.  And they are maintaining CentOS 7, even now, until 2024.  There
are dozens of machines and several administrators to maintain them.

> Redhat must have known, that if they killed off traditional CentOS, then 
> users will simply go elsewhere for a RHEL rebuild ?

If you chose not to use CentOS Stream, that is up to you.  What is the
OS of your TV set.  What is the firmware of your computer.  Those things
are now pretty much irrelevant and commoditized.

At some point the underlying OS is going to be much less important and
the important part will be the layered parts that contain your apps and
not the OS Layer.

If you want a RHEL clone, that's fine.  There will be one available.
Someone will make one.

The real and complete vision of what CentOS Stream will become will not
be compolete until around the end of QTR1 2021.  If you chose not to try
it, that is up to you.   I truly think Stream will be a much better and
more quickly fixed OS when everything is in place.

> 
> I agree that Redhat really screwed up this announcement - they would have got 
> a lot more kudos if they had announced CentOS Stream to exist along with 
> keeping the current traditional CentOS ...
> 

Again .. pay 8 or more people the going rate to just maintain CentOS.
Buy the dozens of machines and pay for the datacenter, bandwidth,
hardware services for machines, etc.  This is very expensive.  Maybe the
company you work for will do that out of the goodness of their heart?

As bummed out as I am about this whole situation, and believe me i am.
But even I can clearly see that Red Hat has gone above and beyond the
requirements of open source software and I am quite tired of all the
'they should be happy to pay several million dollars a year to give away
a working product."  If it is so easy or cheap to do .. then you guys do
it.  I did it for 17 years.  Much of my time was on top of a normal 40
hour work week.

Red Hat contributes to every major upstream project .. they maintain
several very key major projects.  They let employees contribute to
projects and pay for them to work on upstream projects.  how many things
do they have to do for free?

> James Pearson



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Re: [CentOS] Blog article: CentOS is NOT dead

2020-12-14 Thread Mauricio Tavares
On Mon, Dec 14, 2020 at 9:41 AM Nicolas Kovacs  wrote:
>
> Le 14/12/2020 à 15:25, James Pearson a écrit :
> > As others have said, it misses the _really_ important bit about the
> > traditional CentOS model which is to follow the RHEL ~10 year life cycle
>
> I totally agree with you.
>
> But when you disagree with someone (e.g. the CentOS team), it's good at least
> to hear the person out.
>
  If you have followed the other threads in the subject, there is
one called "[CentOS]
https://blog.centos.org/2020/12/future-is-centos-stream/; where centos
and redhat are talking with the users, developers (like the bloke who
does epel), and supporters about the changes. I would say that means
people are discussing that in the list. If you missed that, please
look for it in the mail archive.

> Back at the university here in Montpellier, we had a funny exercise in one of
> the courses. Every one of us had to pick a subject where he or she had a 
> strong
> position. I remember I chose nuclear energy, which I think is a bad choice. 
> And
> in the exercise, I had to *defend* nuclear energy against its opponents.
>
> And I published the link to the article because it's a fine text and nicely
> argumented.
>
  I usually try to avoid reading anything on medium.com because of
its paywall and how it controls what users get to see; I can provide a
link to what a group who left it wrote if you want. But, for the sake
of hearing you out, I opened the doc in a browser in incognito mode.
In it the author states

'CentOS will no longer be old, crusty, and barely alive, trailing RHEL
by months at times.'

First, the word choice in that sentence, which prevails the article,
is anything but nicely argumented as you put it. Second, Centos stream
will have some patches before RHES but the security patches will be
done *after* RHES.  In my book that sounds like it checks the
"trailing RHEL by months at times" box where it counts. So, his pretty
drawing is very innaccurate.

Further down the author tells us that "IBM did not do this. The CentOS
governing board, some of which work for Red Hat, did this." Thanks to
the  "[CentOS] https://blog.centos.org/2020/12/future-is-centos-stream/;
thread it became known that redhat told the centos steering committee
that centos was changing and they -- centos committee -- had the
option to vote to approve those changes -- unanimously -- while redhat
reserved the right to overrule the entire voting. To understand the
significance of this, we need to remember what the "C" in CentOS stand
for: community.

The author also states "This was not done intentionally. It is also
water under the bridge." I would like to focus on the last sentence.
That sounds very final and implies the "C" in Centos matters little
(refer to my previous comment on the decision process).

Then the author goes on and says 'If you are someone who is thinking,
“CentOS is now just the RHEL beta,” please ask yourself, did you use
to consider RHEL to be the CentOS beta? If not, you shouldn’t be
thinking that now about CentOS.' Like in other parts of this "nicely
argumented article" the author is very condescending, implying anyone
who does not agree with his point is a nitwit. In fact, his "The way
software makes it in is the same. It just hits CentOS first instead of
RHEL first" statement is misleading because of the security patches
case I pointed earlier.

Another of the author's points is that "[...] if RHEL is the gold
standard of stability (which many would suggest it is) then why would
CentOS Stream, a distro effectively taking its place in the line-up,
be less stable?" That clashes with what Chris Wright, the Red Hat CTO
stated

"To be exact, CentOS Stream is an upstream development platform for
ecosystem developers. It will be updated several times a day. This is
not a production operating system."
(source: 
https://web.archive.org/web/20201212012342/https://www.redhat.com/en/blog/transforming-development-experience-within-centos)

Further down the author argues 'It’s no secret that CentOS competes
with RHEL. I’ve personally heard CTOs tell Red Hat salespeople, “why
should I buy RHEL when I can use CentOS for free?” I die inside when I
hear that. It is a fair and good question, but asking it tends to fire
up a salesperson and gives them direct financial reasons to hate on
CentOS.' If that is the case, that shows Red Hat salespeople need some
training; there is a RH partner who commented out recently in the list
that his company has no issues helping groups with not enough budget
to use centos, understanding its limitations, and upselling those who
need the commercial version because of the support (last time I used
the RHES support it was quite good).



> Cheers,
>
> Niki
>
> --
> Microlinux - Solutions informatiques durables
> 7, place de l'église - 30730 Montpezat
> Site : https://www.microlinux.fr
> Blog : https://blog.microlinux.fr
> Mail : i...@microlinux.fr
> Tél. : 04 66 63 10 32
> Mob. : 06 51 80 12 12
> 

Re: [CentOS] Blog article: CentOS is NOT dead

2020-12-14 Thread Jon Pruente
On Mon, Dec 14, 2020 at 8:25 AM James Pearson 
wrote:

> I agree that Redhat really screwed up this announcement - they would have
> got a lot more kudos if they had announced CentOS Stream to exist along
> with keeping the current traditional CentOS ...
>

Oh, but they did do that. Last year, when CentOS 8 was announced Stream was
announced alongside it. The screw up here was in killing off CentOS Linux
by decree from Red Hat with a bunch of spin about how we're all better off
for it.
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Re: [CentOS] Blog article: CentOS is NOT dead

2020-12-14 Thread Simon Matter
Hi,

> "Nicolas Kovacs"  wrote:
>
>>  
>> https://freedomben.medium.com/centos-is-not-dead-please-stop-saying-it-is-at-least-until-you-read-this-4b26b5c44877
>
> The article states that CentOS will now be "upstream" of RHEL instead
> of "downstream".
>
> This is strange to me. I never thought CentOS was upstream or
> downstream of RHEL; I always thought it *was* RHEL -- perhaps a little
> delayed, but that's not the same as being "downstream".

But that's also part of the problem for Red Hat, at least that's my
impression and I can understand why.

> It's also clear that Red Hat didn't understand the importance of the
> 10-year support period.

I _could_ probably live with CentOS Stream for the benefit of all even if
it's not 100% identical to RHEL but as stable as it, _but_, only if they
extend the maintenance period to the same 10 years analog to RHEL.

@Red Hat, do you hear our voices?

Regards,
Simon

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Re: [CentOS] Blog article: CentOS is NOT dead

2020-12-14 Thread Yves Bellefeuille
"Nicolas Kovacs"  wrote:

>  
> https://freedomben.medium.com/centos-is-not-dead-please-stop-saying-it-is-at-least-until-you-read-this-4b26b5c44877

The article states that CentOS will now be "upstream" of RHEL instead
of "downstream".

This is strange to me. I never thought CentOS was upstream or
downstream of RHEL; I always thought it *was* RHEL -- perhaps a little
delayed, but that's not the same as being "downstream".

It's also clear that Red Hat didn't understand the importance of the
10-year support period.

-- 
Yves Bellefeuille





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Re: [CentOS] Blog article: CentOS is NOT dead

2020-12-14 Thread Konstantin Boyandin via CentOS
On 14.12.2020 22:39, Ljubomir Ljubojevic wrote:
> On 12/14/20 4:09 PM, Konstantin Boyandin via CentOS wrote:
>> On 14.12.2020 21:41, Nicolas Kovacs wrote:
>>> Le 14/12/2020 à 15:25, James Pearson a écrit :
 As others have said, it misses the _really_ important bit about the
 traditional CentOS model which is to follow the RHEL ~10 year life
 cycle
[...]
>>> And I published the link to the article because it's a fine text and
>>  nicely argumented.
>>
>> Well, it's mostly emotional (the leitmotif: "how can you say CentOS
>> Stream is bad if you didn't try it?"). And the author's bio spoils the
>> fun, as well:
>>
>> "Ben Porter is a Linux and open source advocate, currently working as an
>> OpenShift consultant for Red Hat."
>>
>> And the comments to the graphs, where RHEL, CentOS and Fedora are placed
>> on a line, are simply ridiculous (such as "did you use to consider RHEL
>> to be the CentOS beta?"). With all due respect to Ben Porter, it didn't
>> convince me.
> 
> I have posted a comment that explains why and on which topic he is
> wrong. You post them and I will debunk them :-)

Well, arguing with you in that Medium blog would be counter-productive:
- as far as I see, we share similar viewpoints on CentOS situation
- your response is very detailed, it would make little sense elaborating it

-- 
Sincerely,

Konstantin Boyandin
system administrator (ProWide Labs Ltd. - IPHost Network Monitor)
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Re: [CentOS] Blog article: CentOS is NOT dead

2020-12-14 Thread Ljubomir Ljubojevic
On 12/14/20 4:09 PM, Konstantin Boyandin via CentOS wrote:
> On 14.12.2020 21:41, Nicolas Kovacs wrote:
>> Le 14/12/2020 à 15:25, James Pearson a écrit :
>>> As others have said, it misses the _really_ important bit about the
>>> traditional CentOS model which is to follow the RHEL ~10 year life cycle
>>
>> I totally agree with you.
>>
>> But when you disagree with someone (e.g. the CentOS team), it's good at
>  least
>> to hear the person out.
>>
>> Back at the university here in Montpellier, we had a funny exercise in one
>  of
>> the courses. Every one of us had to pick a subject where he or she had a
>  strong
>> position. I remember I chose nuclear energy, which I think is a bad
>  choice. And
>> in the exercise, I had to *defend* nuclear energy against its opponents.
>>
>> And I published the link to the article because it's a fine text and
>  nicely
>> argumented.
> 
> Well, it's mostly emotional (the leitmotif: "how can you say CentOS 
> Stream is bad if you didn't try it?"). And the author's bio spoils the 
> fun, as well:
> 
> "Ben Porter is a Linux and open source advocate, currently working as an 
> OpenShift consultant for Red Hat."
> 
> And the comments to the graphs, where RHEL, CentOS and Fedora are placed 
> on a line, are simply ridiculous (such as "did you use to consider RHEL 
> to be the CentOS beta?"). With all due respect to Ben Porter, it didn't 
> convince me.
> 

I have posted a comment that explains why and on which topic he is
wrong. You post them and I will debunk them :-)


-- 
Ljubomir Ljubojevic
(Love is in the Air)
PL Computers
Serbia, Europe

StarOS, Mikrotik and CentOS/RHEL/Linux consultant
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Re: [CentOS] Blog article: CentOS is NOT dead

2020-12-14 Thread Konstantin Boyandin via CentOS
On 14.12.2020 21:41, Nicolas Kovacs wrote:
> Le 14/12/2020 à 15:25, James Pearson a écrit :
>> As others have said, it misses the _really_ important bit about the
>> traditional CentOS model which is to follow the RHEL ~10 year life cycle
> 
> I totally agree with you.
> 
> But when you disagree with someone (e.g. the CentOS team), it's good at
 least
> to hear the person out.
> 
> Back at the university here in Montpellier, we had a funny exercise in one
 of
> the courses. Every one of us had to pick a subject where he or she had a
 strong
> position. I remember I chose nuclear energy, which I think is a bad
 choice. And
> in the exercise, I had to *defend* nuclear energy against its opponents.
> 
> And I published the link to the article because it's a fine text and
 nicely
> argumented.

Well, it's mostly emotional (the leitmotif: "how can you say CentOS 
Stream is bad if you didn't try it?"). And the author's bio spoils the 
fun, as well:

"Ben Porter is a Linux and open source advocate, currently working as an 
OpenShift consultant for Red Hat."

And the comments to the graphs, where RHEL, CentOS and Fedora are placed 
on a line, are simply ridiculous (such as "did you use to consider RHEL 
to be the CentOS beta?"). With all due respect to Ben Porter, it didn't 
convince me.

-- 
Sincerely,

Konstantin Boyandin
system administrator (ProWide Labs Ltd. - IPHost Network Monitor)
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Re: [CentOS] Blog article: CentOS is NOT dead

2020-12-14 Thread Nicolas Kovacs
Le 14/12/2020 à 15:25, James Pearson a écrit :
> As others have said, it misses the _really_ important bit about the
> traditional CentOS model which is to follow the RHEL ~10 year life cycle

I totally agree with you.

But when you disagree with someone (e.g. the CentOS team), it's good at least
to hear the person out.

Back at the university here in Montpellier, we had a funny exercise in one of
the courses. Every one of us had to pick a subject where he or she had a strong
position. I remember I chose nuclear energy, which I think is a bad choice. And
in the exercise, I had to *defend* nuclear energy against its opponents.

And I published the link to the article because it's a fine text and nicely
argumented.

Cheers,

Niki

-- 
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7, place de l'église - 30730 Montpezat
Site : https://www.microlinux.fr
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Re: [CentOS] Blog article: CentOS is NOT dead

2020-12-14 Thread James Pearson
Nicolas Kovacs 
> 
> Here's an interesting read which makes a point for CentOS Stream:
> 
> https://freedomben.medium.com/centos-is-not-dead-please-stop-saying-it-is-at-least-until-you-read-this-4b26b5c44877
>
> tl;dr: Communication about Stream was BAD, but Stream itself might be a good
> thing. Here's why.

As others have said, it misses the _really_ important bit about the traditional 
CentOS model which is to follow the RHEL ~10 year life cycle

It doesn't matter how good/rock solid/whatever CentOS Stream turns out to be, 
but if it only has a 5 year life cycle for each major release, then it no good 
to me (and I suspect many others)

The article also mentions "CentOS will no longer be old, crusty, and barely 
alive, trailing RHEL by months at times" - then why didn't Redhat put resources 
into CentOS to improve that?

Redhat must have known, that if they killed off traditional CentOS, then users 
will simply go elsewhere for a RHEL rebuild ?

I agree that Redhat really screwed up this announcement - they would have got a 
lot more kudos if they had announced CentOS Stream to exist along with keeping 
the current traditional CentOS ...

James Pearson
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Re: [CentOS] Blog article: CentOS is NOT dead

2020-12-14 Thread Gionatan Danti

Il 2020-12-14 13:07 Nicolas Kovacs ha scritto:

Hi,

Here's an interesting read which makes a point for CentOS Stream:

https://freedomben.medium.com/centos-is-not-dead-please-stop-saying-it-is-at-least-until-you-read-this-4b26b5c44877

tl;dr: Communication about Stream was BAD, but Stream itself might be a 
good

thing. Here's why.

Cheers,

Niki


While interesting, I think the blog post fails to identify the the main 
issue with Stream:
- Stream can be updated many times each days. You basically have a 
non-stop incoming flow of updates;
- as far I know, Stream does not have (and will not have) 
"synchronization points" with mail RHEL;

- the support window is much shorter (ie: 2024 vs 2029).

Anyone relying on RHEL/CentOS to be kABI compatible can be severely 
impacted by the first two points (it's difficult planning updates with 
rolling releases, when the kernel version can change from a day to 
another), while the third one (shorter support window) affect anyone.


Basically it seems to me that Stream will be to RHEL the same Rawhide is 
to normal Fedora releases. While this has the potential to be a good 
move, it should be offered *in addition* to normal CentOS releases - 
which effectively are a different product.


That said I am grateful to all the volunteers that made CentOS possible, 
and I don't want the above to be taken as a rant - they only are my 
(possibly wrong) opinions.


Regards.

--
Danti Gionatan
Supporto Tecnico
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Re: [CentOS] Blog article: CentOS is NOT dead

2020-12-14 Thread Walter H.

On 14.12.2020 13:07, Nicolas Kovacs wrote:

Hi,

Here's an interesting read which makes a point for CentOS Stream:

https://freedomben.medium.com/centos-is-not-dead-please-stop-saying-it-is-at-least-until-you-read-this-4b26b5c44877

tl;dr: Communication about Stream was BAD, but Stream itself might be a good
thing. Here's why.


'might' doesn't mean 'is', there the "terminus techicus" 'dead' is korrekt


"CentOS Stream intends to be as stable as RHEL"

and where is the 10 year update support?

the last update of CentOS Stream will be in the year 2024

and do you really think it is worth the work to migrate to CentOS Stream,
when knowing to have this work again in less than 4 years?

Walter



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[CentOS] Blog article: CentOS is NOT dead

2020-12-14 Thread Nicolas Kovacs
Hi,

Here's an interesting read which makes a point for CentOS Stream:

https://freedomben.medium.com/centos-is-not-dead-please-stop-saying-it-is-at-least-until-you-read-this-4b26b5c44877

tl;dr: Communication about Stream was BAD, but Stream itself might be a good
thing. Here's why.

Cheers,

Niki
-- 
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7, place de l'église - 30730 Montpezat
Site : https://www.microlinux.fr
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Mail : i...@microlinux.fr
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