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Date:      Tue, 2 Sep 2014 12:01:13 +0200
From:      Alban Hertroys <haramrae@gmail.com>
To:        Julian Elischer <julian@freebsd.org>
Cc:        pkg@freebsd.org, Baptiste Daroussin <bapt@freebsd.org>, Andrew Berg <aberg010@my.hennepintech.edu>, FreeBSD Current <current@freebsd.org>, stable@freebsd.org, ports@freebsd.org, Michelle Sullivan <michelle@sorbs.net>, "Sam Fourman Jr." <sfourman@gmail.com>
Subject:   Re: [HEADSUP] pkg(8) is now the only package management tool
Message-ID:  <CAF-3MvNBWSEWF-HarwF0xcXQgo=7-dO%2BtvLMO1maELPY0RVhQQ@mail.gmail.com>
In-Reply-To: <5405890F.8080804@freebsd.org>
References:  <20140901195520.GB77917@ivaldir.etoilebsd.net> <54050D07.4010404@sorbs.net> <CAOFF%2BZ1MOr9-rYbwHYWqBKjMvRPwUnew4jThEoJ_WkoTmwyNsQ@mail.gmail.com> <540522A3.9050506@sorbs.net> <54052891.5000104@my.hennepintech.edu> <54052DFA.4030808@freebsd.org> <54053372.6020009@my.hennepintech.edu> <5405890F.8080804@freebsd.org>

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On 2 September 2014 11:08, Julian Elischer <julian@freebsd.org> wrote:
> On 9/1/14, 8:03 PM, Andrew Berg wrote:
>>
>> On 2014.09.01 21:39, Julian Elischer wrote:
>>>
>>> sigh..  when are we as a project, all going to learn that reality in
>>> business is
>>> that you often need to install stuff that is old. Its not always your
>>> choice.
>>> The custommers require it..
>>> You should try arguing with someone like Bank of Americas security and
>>> operations
>>> department some day about whether they want to suddenly upgrade 300
>>> machines
>>> for no real reason (from their perspective).
>>
>> FreeBSD minor version upgrades are meant to be non-disruptive. However, I
>> will
>> admit that I have not performed any such upgrades in a critical
>> environment, so
>> if you think they are disruptive, please enlighten me with the details.
>> Also, there are options out there for getting support for extended periods
>> if
>> you need it. Some companies are built around providing support for things
>> that
>> the original developers have long abandoned because some businesses need
>> it.
>
>
> It's not how disruptive they are technically.
> it's how many months of shakedown testing you have to go through before they
> allow you to put new software on any production system.

Just adding here, in commercial environments things don't change
quickly or easily. Whether this applies to the current issue with pkg
is not for me to say.

For example, certain commercial upstream software vendors require to
go through a certification process before they even consider
supporting the new software you intend to use with theirs.

Admittedly we haven't run into this issue in relation to FreeBSD, but
we certainly have with Firefox. As an example, the last version of
Firefox that Information Builders' WebFOCUS 7.7 supports is 3.6.7
(currently available versions are 31 or 32!) and for Internet Explorer
that's 7 (currently at 11).
If you run into any kind of problem, the standard answer is to use a
browser that they support. Good luck with that!
Firefox 3.6.7 was released on July 20, 2010; over 4 years ago.

In such cases you're more or less required to keep an old system
around that still has such old packages, if only to see if you can
reproduce any issues you encounter (with modern versions of your
software) on those old versions.

With the deprecation of the old pkg_* tools you run into a conflict;
You can either update packages that are _not_ under certification for
such a vendor and get security updates and fixes using the new pkg, or
you have to stick with the certified software and _not_ get any
security updates or fixes.


It gets more interesting if you have to deal with manufacturing
processes (something we're looking to use FreeBSD for to replace our
current OpenVMS systems before they go out of support), as often
automatons write data to external databases and such software resides
in PLC's. Manufacturing equipment tends to age and the kind of
external databases they support is limited to what was available when
they were new and the capabilities of the PLC involved.

I can totally understand that at some point it starts to get
impossible to maintain two separate packaging systems and I understand
that you think 2 years is enough time to shake things out, but
software vendors aren't that quick. For many, 2 years is a short time.

Just saying...
-- 
If you can't see the forest for the trees,
Cut the trees and you'll see there is no forest.



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