On 2023/10/13 10:38, Jason Wang wrote:
On Wed, Oct 11, 2023 at 11:40 PM Akihiko Odaki <akihiko.od...@daynix.com> wrote:
It was necessary since an Linux older than 2.6.35 may implement the
virtio-net header but may not allow to change its length. Remove it
since such an old Linux is no longer supported.
Where can I see this agreement?
docs/about/build-platforms.rst says:
> The project aims to support the most recent major version at all times
> for up to five years after its initial release. Support for the
> previous major version will be dropped 2 years after the new major
> version is released or when the vendor itself drops support, whichever
> comes first. In this context, third-party efforts to extend the
> lifetime of a distro are not considered, even when they are endorsed
> by the vendor (eg. Debian LTS); the same is true of repositories that
> contain packages backported from later releases (e.g. Debian
> backports). Within each major release, only the most recent minor
> release is considered.
>
> For the purposes of identifying supported software versions available
> on Linux, the project will look at CentOS, Debian, Fedora, openSUSE,
> RHEL, SLES and Ubuntu LTS. Other distros will be assumed to ship
> similar software versions.
All of the previous major versions of these distributions ship far newer
kernels.
CentOS Stream 8 and RHEL 8 ship 4.18.0.
Debian bullseye ships 5.10.0.
Fedora 37 ships 6.5.6.
openSUSE Leap 15.4 ships 5.14.21.
SLES 12 ships 4.12.14.
Ubuntu 20.04 ships 5.4.