On 1/5/19 9:21 PM, "hans dieter"" (hans2020die...@gmx.de) wrote:
Where can I look up the versioning of SOGo builds? Is there only this
Change-Log on Github, or is there an official Version-List?
I'm not sure... are you looking for the release announcements?
https://sogo.nu/news.html
What about those production-/nightly builds? I mean, which build
numbers do each of them have? Where can I see the build numbers?
https://packages.inverse.ca/SOGo/nightly/4/rhel/7/x86_64/RPMS/
Packages bear a release version number and a date for nightly builds.
And what is the Source-Code supposed to be? Is it the Source-Code from
the production build or from the nightly build?
I assume, that this Source-Code is only from one of both (production
build or nightly build), so where is the other code from both?
If you mean: https://packages.inverse.ca/SOGo/sources/ then I believe
source archives are only published for releases.
The "nightly" directory structure has source packages that match
binaries (for rpm, at least):
https://packages.inverse.ca/SOGo/nightly/4/rhel/7/SRPMS/
I appreciate the approach to make the development builds free, but the
production builds to be paid.
And I also appreciate the support-contract-model that SOGo does. But
what I don't understand: why is there no cheap contract for students
or very small business?
I mean $750 per year is very much for one person, who don't need and
dont wan't any Support. I mean, why is there no cheap contract like:
$25 for the Production build for 5 users, and every single more user
costs $5 extra or something like that... Why do I need to buy the hole
8:00am to 5:00pm Support, when I just wan't the production builds?
$750 is worth when you run more than 200 Users ... but not for me
The point at which the price is worth paying is subjective, and I think
SOGo has a different user in mind for their price structure. ($750 is
roughly the cost of Office 365 Enterprise E1 for 7 users. For a SOHO
smaller than that, O365 is cheaper.) For home/not-for-profit use,
it's... reasonably easy to build the packages. I've got scripts that
automate the process:
https://github.com/gordonmessmer/build-sogo/
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