Walter H.
2018-Oct-18 17:36 UTC
[CentOS] Future Releases (was: What are the differences between systemd and non-systemd Linux distros?)
On 18.10.2018 00:08, Johnny Hughes wrote:> The bottom line .. we don't make the decision whether or not to use > systemd or not. We rebuild RHEL source code.will there come a CentOS 6.11 which will be capable of TLS1.3 or HTTP/2? I'm sure there will come a CentOS 8, but when is it probable to be released? one of the most important things (for me), as I already noticed there will be quite differences between CentOS 6 and CentOS 7, not only systemd or not, also Apache 2.2 and 2.4 and many other; the config files won't be the same, will there be a migrate helper or something like this which does the config conversion to get a CentOS 7 or maybe then CentOS 8 that does exact the same things the old CentOS 6 did? Greetings Walter
On 10/18/18 1:36 PM, Walter H. wrote:> On 18.10.2018 00:08, Johnny Hughes wrote: >> The bottom line .. we don't make the decision whether or not to use >> systemd or not.? We rebuild RHEL source code. > will there come a CentOS 6.11 which will be capable of TLS1.3 or HTTP/2? > I'm sure there will come a CentOS 8, but when is it probable to be > released?You will also need openSSL 1.1.1 for some TLS 1.3 functions.> one of the most important things (for me), as I already noticed there > will be quite differences > between CentOS 6 and CentOS 7, not only systemd or not, also Apache > 2.2 and 2.4 > and many other; > the config files won't be the same, will there be a migrate helper or > something like this > which does the config conversion to get a CentOS 7 or maybe then CentOS 8 > that does exact the same things the old CentOS 6 did?
Johnny Hughes
2018-Oct-18 20:14 UTC
[CentOS] Future Releases (was: What are the differences between systemd and non-systemd Linux distros?)
On 10/18/2018 12:36 PM, Walter H. wrote:> On 18.10.2018 00:08, Johnny Hughes wrote: >> The bottom line .. we don't make the decision whether or not to use >> systemd or not.? We rebuild RHEL source code. > will there come a CentOS 6.11 which will be capable of TLS1.3 or HTTP/2? > I'm sure there will come a CentOS 8, but when is it probable to be > released? >We have no idea .. we don't design what is in CentOS. If Red Hat adds those things to RHEL-6 then we will put them in CentOS .. If they don't we won't.> one of the most important things (for me), as I already noticed there > will be quite differences > between CentOS 6 and CentOS 7, not only systemd or not, also Apache 2.2 > and 2.4 > and many other; > the config files won't be the same, will there be a migrate helper or > something like this > which does the config conversion to get a CentOS 7 or maybe then CentOS 8 > that does exact the same things the old CentOS 6 did? >No, there is no automated way to move from CentOS-6 to CentOS-7 .. and we have no idea what will be in CentOS-8 until Red Hat releases RHEL-8. We have no idea what will be in CentOS-6.11 until Red Hat releases RHEL-6.11 .. and we have no idea what will be in the release of CentOS-7 until Red Hat releases RHEL-7.6 .. literally, we take the source code they release .. modify it for Trademarks and Logos .. and release it. Until it is released, we don't have a clue. -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: signature.asc Type: application/pgp-signature Size: 198 bytes Desc: OpenPGP digital signature URL: <http://lists.centos.org/pipermail/centos/attachments/20181018/39e4a3d4/attachment-0001.sig>
On 10/18/18 4:14 PM, Johnny Hughes wrote:> On 10/18/2018 12:36 PM, Walter H. wrote: >> On 18.10.2018 00:08, Johnny Hughes wrote: >>> The bottom line .. we don't make the decision whether or not to use >>> systemd or not.? We rebuild RHEL source code. >> will there come a CentOS 6.11 which will be capable of TLS1.3 or HTTP/2? >> I'm sure there will come a CentOS 8, but when is it probable to be >> released? >> > We have no idea .. we don't design what is in CentOS. If Red Hat adds > those things to RHEL-6 then we will put them in CentOS .. If they don't > we won't.And for example, if RH does not backport openSSL 1.1.1, you will not get EDDSA certificate support for TLS? 1.3.? Now you might not care about this for your servers and just continue to use ECDSA certs. Clients will increasingly encounter EDDSA certs and it will be interesting to see how this is handled in older clients.? We have had years to spread support for ECDSA before it started appearing from servers.? May not for EDDSA. Self-touting, I have an Internet Draft out on using openSSL command line to build an EDDSA pki.? I did the work on Fedora29-beta. I think all the other TLS 1.3 features are in the latest 1.0.n version of openSSL.? Of course that is ALSO a backport issue. I have been told that if you set up your client to only accept TLS 1.3 connections, the Secure Internet gets really small really fast...> >> one of the most important things (for me), as I already noticed there >> will be quite differences >> between CentOS 6 and CentOS 7, not only systemd or not, also Apache 2.2 >> and 2.4 >> and many other; >> the config files won't be the same, will there be a migrate helper or >> something like this >> which does the config conversion to get a CentOS 7 or maybe then CentOS 8 >> that does exact the same things the old CentOS 6 did? >> > No, there is no automated way to move from CentOS-6 to CentOS-7 .. and > we have no idea what will be in CentOS-8 until Red Hat releases RHEL-8. > We have no idea what will be in CentOS-6.11 until Red Hat releases > RHEL-6.11 .. and we have no idea what will be in the release of CentOS-7 > until Red Hat releases RHEL-7.6 .. literally, we take the source code > they release .. modify it for Trademarks and Logos .. and release it. > Until it is released, we don't have a clue. > > > > > > _______________________________________________ > CentOS mailing list > CentOS at centos.org > https://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos
> No, there is no automated way to move from CentOS-6 to CentOS-7 .. and > we have no idea what will be in CentOS-8 until Red Hat releases RHEL-8. > We have no idea what will be in CentOS-6.11 until Red Hat releases > RHEL-6.11 .. and we have no idea what will be in the release of CentOS-7 > until Red Hat releases RHEL-7.6 .. literally, we take the source code > they release .. modify it for Trademarks and Logos .. and release it. > Until it is released, we don't have a clue.This is in the RHEL 7.6 Beta Release Notes: Part I. New Features This part documents new features and major enhancements introduced in Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7.6 Beta. Chapter 4. General Updates In-place upgrade from Red Hat Enterprise Linux 6 to Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7 An in-place upgrade offers a way of upgrading a system to a new major release of Red Hat Enterprise Linux by replacing the existing operating system. To perform an in-place upgrade, use the Preupgrade Assistant, a utility that checks the system for upgrade issues before running the actual upgrade, and that also provides additional scripts for the Red Hat Upgrade Tool. When you have solved all the problems reported by the Preupgrade Assistant, use the Red Hat Upgrade Tool to upgrade the system.
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