On Wed, Nov 14, 2018 at 07:54:24AM -0500, Neal Gompa wrote:
> > If we reduce the non-LTS supported time from 13 months to, let's say, 7
> > months (2 months overlap to allow for time to upgrade) then perhaps it
> > could work? And then add a LTS branch that's supported for 3 years? We'd
> > have the same number of branches as now, just that one is LTS.
> That's basically the Ubuntu model. They do 9 months for regular
> releases, and 5 years (originally 3 years) for LTS releases.
> 
> However, what could also work would be something along the lines of
> openSUSE Evergreen[1] model (prior to the shift to openSUSE Leap +
> Tumbleweed), where the community decides on a version to stabilize and
> maintain for bugfixes for an extended period of time. If we wanted to
> talk about having extended lifecycles, I think this would be a
> workable model. This would be similar to the original Fedora Legacy
> project (if anyone remembers that!).
> 
> [1]: https://en.opensuse.org/openSUSE:Evergreen

Yeah I came into Fedora through the Legacy project. :)

There are also ideas from Tom Callaway's proposal from FUDCon Lawrence: a
major release every two years, followed by point updates. Kind of like RHL
back in the day.


-- 
Matthew Miller
<mat...@fedoraproject.org>
Fedora Project Leader
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