Sorry, I should have been more clear. Just wondering in general if there is a
policy, not as any kind of library. Below are more examples from that website
of tools, servers and services. It?s possible there still isn?t a timeframe but
wondering about general end-of-life expectations even if there have been only
cursory discussions.
https://endoflife.date/ansible-core
https://endoflife.date/tomcat
https://endoflife.date/postgresql
Example PostgreSQL Versioning policy:
https://www.postgresql.org/support/versioning/
"The PostgreSQL Global Development Group supports a major version for 5
years after its initial release. After its five year anniversary, a major
version will have one last minor release containing any fixes and will be
considered end-of-life (EOL) and no longer supported."
> On Oct 12, 2023, at 10:53?PM, Damien Miller <djm at mindrot.org>
wrote:
>
> EXTERNAL EMAIL
>
> On Tue, 10 Oct 2023, Jeremy Guthrie wrote:
>
>> Is there any kind of published end-of-life schedule/expectations the
OpenSSH community maintains that could be reflected on a site like of
https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://endoflife.date/__;!!HUqgN_M!p3EDk0gRs5gn7cKVhvaGi0EPp_iDoEN1rx4RZWA-SlQIvZKlOTjUH34xZLDNKT2lbH-sL9QA3qC03-4$
>> Example of OpenSSL:
https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://endoflife.date/openssl__;!!HUqgN_M!p3EDk0gRs5gn7cKVhvaGi0EPp_iDoEN1rx4RZWA-SlQIvZKlOTjUH34xZLDNKT2lbH-sL9QA-tunzHw$
>
> No. We don't ship a library, so the situation is different.