[...]
> I understand QEMU is just but one variable in the complex
equation.
> Listing QEMU was just an example for this series based on the 8 years
> since 0.12 which is the minimum we support now vs. 5 years since 1.3
> which is where this series was headed. Using the 2-3 years you responded
> in other threads would bring us to QEMU 2.2 or even 2.5.
Not sure how you get to 2.2 ? Even if we drop RHEL-6, RHEL-7 ships 1.5.3
version of QEMU.
It's the always troubling multiple factor equation. My eyes/brain
dropped the "overlapping" in the other thread's comment:
"This is a sign that instead of saying 2 major releases, we should
instead define "NN" years of overlapping support for a value of NN that
is 2 or 3."
If we went strict 3 years on QEMU support it's 2.2, but throw RHEL7 into
the equation it's 1.5 (almost 5 years old). When/if any OS release train
starts moving faster, we could have a whole lot of interesting
decisions. Still keeping track of which QEMU went into which RHEL (or
SLES or Debian or ...) is not something I keep in the short or long term
memory 0-).
John