On Thu, 2016-07-07 at 12:32 +1000, Michael Gratton wrote: > Eg. Ubuntu is still supporting 12.04 (GTK+ 3.4) until April next > year, > and 14.04 (GTK+ 3.10) until April 2019[0]. OpenSUSE 3.14 (GTK+ 3.10 > I > think?) is their current Evergreen and will be supported through to > November[1], while RHEL4 is supported through to the end of March > next > year, and RHEL 5 until November 2020 (no idea what GTK versions they > support however - maybe only GTK+ 2.x!)[2]. The next Debian stable > won't be released until early 2018, and will have at least GTK 3.20, > likely higher.
Well we need to keep reasonable expectations here. Now that we're past the WebKit2 transition, we can probably support any future Ubuntu LTS for its full five years. But we can't support the 10-year LTS enterprise distros. We also don't want to worry about less-popular or unofficial efforts (openSUSE Evergreen). I'd personally focus on catering to any major distro that actually releases WebKit updates, to make sure they can continue to easily update WebKit. Unfortunately that would currently disqualify both Ubuntu and Debian as yardsticks here.... Michael _______________________________________________ webkit-gtk mailing list [email protected] https://lists.webkit.org/mailman/listinfo/webkit-gtk
