@Nish: Big thanks for sharing the thoughts of the server team and that
you take this issue serious :) Running quite a lot web servers with PHP
on Ubuntu LTS and RHEL in prodution, i like give you some short feedback
on the mentioned options:

1 & 4: are a no go if Ubuntu Server wants to stay as relevant as it is
now in the web server OS market. Although it would probably bring a big
boost to Raphaël Hertzog's LTS efforts ;)

2: Is what makes users really happy. It will definitely strengthen
Ubuntu's role in the PHP market with more work for Canonical.

3 & 5: While i can fully understand the reasons, both will dissatisfy a
lot of people. Given the reduced load impact of PHP 7.0 in data centers
and the huge install base of widely used PHP 5.* web apps.

So option 2 is the bravest option for Canonical, but will give you the
most user satisfaction. Given that the packaging work by Ondřej and
others made this dual stack option possible and AFAIK didn't happen with
Canonical involved,  you could just keep "standing on the shoulders of
giants" as maintenance would be mainly communication, syncing and
merging with Debian or out sourcing to Ondřej ;). And for just sticking
to that, you should really take feedback from the PHP and security teams
at Debian :)

BTW i would love to see option 2 happening, as i am still so happy about
the other brave move Canonical made with promoting Nginx to main for
trusty. I replaced Apache in so many production environments :)

-- 
You received this bug notification because you are a member of Ubuntu
Server Team, which is subscribed to php5 in Ubuntu.
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1522422

Title:
  Update to php 7.0

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