[log in to unmask]" type="cite">On 09/01/14 22:53, jdow wrote:Ian, I suspect the SL staff position is more proper engineering with it's concern about what could possibly go wrong than it is about minimizing their work or compromising their main sponsor's needs. I suspect that the SL staff position is also tempered with a healthy dose of, "What do our customers want and need?"I didn't suggest otherwise. However, I could have sworn I read somewhere that Red Hat would stop release their source as SRPMs (which would have a direct impact on the build process of SL I assume), but I can't find that now. Maybe I mis-read that. I'll keep looking.
Yes.
Going forward, the source code repository at git.centos.org will
replace and obsolete the Red Hat Enterprise Linux source rpms on
ftp.redhat.com. Git provides an attractive alternative to ftp
because it saves time, reduces human error, and makes it easier
for CentOS users to collaborate on and build their own
distributions, including those of SIGs.
So, as I read it, SL will need to change whether it likes it or
not, unless RHEL SRPMs will be available through other channels.
[log in to unmask]" type="cite">The main SL customers are their sponsers, Fermilab and Cern. They do not need the latest and greatest. They need stable support for "what we already have for as long as practical."I thought core CentOS would still track Red Hat in releases and support lengths. If I have that wrong, then that does throw a spanner in the works.All the other SL customers, such as you and I, don't matter a hill of beans against the billion dollar investments of their sponsors. I am sitting back and watching. I certainly respect their work, appreciate their work, and admittedly sponge off their work. So I'd not dream of trying to tell them what to do.I wouldn't dream of telling them what to do either. All I am doing here is chewing the cud, as it were. FWIW, I don't feel link I sponge... I merely drink from the same open source cup that SL and Red Hat does. I have a few lines of code accepted in the Xen project; does that mean all Xen users (4.3+) are sponging off me? I don't think so.I do note that for the machine on which I use SL it is precisely the sort of thing I want, too. {^_^} Joanne Dow On 2014/01/09 14:30, Ian Murray wrote:On 09/01/14 21:12, William R. Somsky wrote:One thing people should keep in mind while discussing this is the why the original Fermilab distro (and Cern distro) which then became Scientific Linux was created, and why Fermilab continues to actively commit resources to SL. Remember Fermilab (and Cern) are particle accelerator facilities with million/billion dollar experiments that *must* have long-term guarantees of stable and supported software. To make Scientific Linux a variant of Centos would be to introduce an unknown/uncontrollable element as a controlling factor in the mix. What if Centos pulled an Ubuntu and decided to start introducing controversial changes in an attempt to become more "user friendly" or to "win the desktop"? A merging w/ Centos would need to carefully consider such issues.I don't come from a scientific background, just more of a piggy-backer on what seems to be a well governed and reliably supported operating system. An O/S with some big names behind it, such as they ones you mentioned above. I was a longterm CentOS user until it became clear that there was surprising little opaqueness around the governance and processes of the project and it seemed overly reliant on one or two individuals. Despite it being having a huge userbase, I came to the conclusion that this was largely a vanity project for those individuals. Now, the Red Hat news has completely changed that situation. So for me, CentOS is now viable again. To answer your concern, directly:- "To make Scientific Linux a variant of Centos would be to introduce an unknown/uncontrollable element as a controlling factor in the mix." Scientific Linux is already based on Red Hat Enterprise Linux, so in that sense you are not introducing any new element, in my opinion. The press release talks about Special Interest Groups and official variants. Now if SL was to become an official variant, then part of the acceptance of the SIG from the Scientific side could be to get confirmation that ongoing support would suit the needs you speak of. Something else worth remember that I seem to recall reading on this list that a discussion had taken place sometime ago about a possible merger between CentOS and SL (or at least a common base). The wording in the list that I recall was that "the conclusion was that both projects goals were too different". Obviously, that is wide open to exact interpretation. Those differences may now be reconcilable or even moot. Having said all that, it would be a shame for the (now) only significant independent RHEL rebuild project to lose its independence.On 01/08/14 11:53, Connie Sieh wrote:We are in the process of researching/evaluating this news and how it impacts Scientific Linux. -Connie Sieh