Dear all, FWIW, Microsoft sells extended support (Windows 7 ESU) to corporate customers using Pro or Enterprise editions. It can be extended until Jan 10th 2023.
https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/troubleshoot/windows-client/windows-7-eos-f aq/windows-7-extended-security-updates-faq Kind regards. Samuel -----Original Message----- From: WireGuard <[email protected]> On Behalf Of Laslo Hunhold Sent: mardi, 10 novembre 2020 13:48 To: [email protected] Subject: Re: Should we sunset Windows 7 support? On Tue, 10 Nov 2020 13:27:20 +0100 "Jason A. Donenfeld" <[email protected]> wrote: Dear Jason, > Windows 7 has been EOL'd by Microsoft since January of this year. It > is no longer receiving security updates or fixes. This email is to get > the conversation started about doing the same with WireGuard for > Windows. > [...] Do we really want to keep maintaining gross stuff like this? It > makes me uncomfortable to have kludges like that sitting around in the > code. Shouldn't I write an auto-downloader that then checks hashes? > Shouldn't I build this into the installer? Shouldn't I.... > waste tons of time supporting Windows 7 better? > > Probably not. > > But I know so many users are still using Windows 7. I'd like to hear > from you to understand why, in order to assess when is the right > moment to sunset our Windows 7 support. > > So, if you care for Windows 7, please pipe up! We're not going to > remove support for it overnight, and we're not prepared yet to > announce any sort of formal deprecation plan, but the world is moving > on at some point. this is a really difficult judgement to make, which comes up every time Microsoft EOLs an operating system, because it really often is still heavily used. My stance is that we as open source developers don't owe anybody anything, and if Windows 7 users really care about WireGuard they can create, share and maintain a patchset that implements the fixes themselves. You shouldn't be the one paying the price (i.e. time spent) because people insist on using an EOL'd operating system, which presents a security issue in many other aspects as well. If they can't do it themselves, they could pay somebody to deal with such a patchset, or just keep running the last supported version of WireGuard. In an utilitarian sense, because you're losing time over Windows 7 support, everyone else is negatively affected, because it's time you could spend on aspects of WireGuard everyone benefits from, and not only those running an EOL'd operating system. To put it shortly, I'm completely in support of sunsetting Windows 7 support, or even just keeping the Windows-7-changes in the next release for one last time and then immediately dropping them right afterwards in the git-master. I'm not sure what you exactly mean with sunsetting, which is why I've given the above "drastic" proposal in case sunsetting means dealing with this nonsense for another year or something. With best regards Laslo Hunhold -- L'absence de virus dans ce courrier électronique a été vérifiée par le logiciel antivirus Avast. https://www.avast.com/antivirus
