On 2/11/24 02:07, Ole Aamot wrote:
"This whole “we support everything for 10 years” is just a sales pitch, not a something that can be fulfilled." – Ondřej Surý — ISC
I realize that there was a whole kerfuffle here that I mercifully missed and have absolutely no interest in. But it did "provoke" a question. Does anyone think not restarting *anything* for 10 years is a good idea? I realize there were all these fanbois back in the day that wanted to prove *NIX could stay up longer and with greater stability than Windows. But best practices would suggest that you patch and restart monthly at a minimum and more often for zero-days and more immediate threats. I would include among this the OS itself as well as key infrastructure services. Oh, and for the record, I think ISC does a very fine job ;) -- Visit https://lists.isc.org/mailman/listinfo/bind-users to unsubscribe from this list ISC funds the development of this software with paid support subscriptions. Contact us at https://www.isc.org/contact/ for more information. bind-users mailing list bind-users@lists.isc.org https://lists.isc.org/mailman/listinfo/bind-users