On Dec 7, 2015, at 12:54 PM, Gordon Messmer <gordon.mess...@gmail.com> wrote:
> 
> It has been my impression for a long time that the CentOS developers are 
> reluctant to engage the community in contributing to the project

Who is “contributing” here?  Where’s the patch?  All I see is a bunch of 
bikeshedding.

The new version numbering scheme was created to solve a real problem, which 
CentOS has been fighting for years.[*]

If you change anything about the version numbering scheme within the 7 line, 
you break automated workflows that were debugged and deployed a year ago.  The 
time to make such a change is 8 at earliest, and I’d argue that switching 
*again* after the 7 effort would cause more problems than it solves.

Remember, this distro is about stability.  Changing naming/numbering schemes in 
a way that breaks scripts is about as far from stability as you can get.


[*] With every release from CentOS 3.1 through 6.7, there was always a series 
of mailing list questions of the same basic form: “FooApp is only certified for 
CentOS 6.4, but CentOS 6.7 is out, and the vendor won’t update the 
certification, so how do I keep my servers on CentOS 6.4?”   Just as there is 
no CentOS 7.2, only 7, there was no CentOS 6.4, only 6.  The new scheme tries 
to make that clear.

It would actually *be* clear if the tail (CentOS) could wag the dog (Red Hat) 
here and get them to adopt the YYMM respin scheme.
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