Re: Deprecation of stuff

2019-09-04 Thread Viktor Dukhovni
+1 (and more) to the below! > On Sep 4, 2019, at 10:15 AM, David Woodhouse wrote: > > I'd note that the question of *versioning* mechanisms is a very very > special case of "when to deprecate stuff". So much so as to almost make > it a completely separate question altogether. > > My own

Re: Deprecation of stuff

2019-09-04 Thread David Woodhouse
On Mon, 2019-09-02 at 08:38 +0200, Richard Levitte wrote: > The dispute in PR https://github.com/openssl/openssl/pull/7853 has > made it quote obvious that we have some very different ideas on when > and why we should or shouldn't deprecate stuff. > > What does deprecation mean? Essentially,

Re: Deprecation of stuff

2019-09-04 Thread Viktor Dukhovni
On Wed, Sep 04, 2019 at 02:43:34PM +0200, Tomas Mraz wrote: > > The dispute in PR https://github.com/openssl/openssl/pull/7853 has > > made it quote obvious that we have some very different ideas on when > > and why we should or shouldn't deprecate stuff. > > > > What does deprecation mean?

Re: Deprecation of stuff

2019-09-04 Thread Tomas Mraz
On Mon, 2019-09-02 at 08:38 +0200, Richard Levitte wrote: > The dispute in PR https://github.com/openssl/openssl/pull/7853 has > made it quote obvious that we have some very different ideas on when > and why we should or shouldn't deprecate stuff. > > What does deprecation mean? Essentially,

Forthcoming OpenSSL Releases

2019-09-04 Thread Matt Caswell
The OpenSSL project team would like to announce the forthcoming release of OpenSSL versions 1.1.1d, 1.1.0l and 1.0.2t. These releases will be made available on 10th September 2019 between approximately 1200-1600 UTC. These are security fix releases. The highest severity security issue fixed by