On Mon, Apr 04, 2022 at 10:35:25AM +0200, Peter Krempa wrote:
As of April 23 2022, Ubuntu 20.04 will be out for two years, which
means
we no longer have to support Ubuntu 18.04 along with qemu-2.11 shipped
with it.
This then brings the minimum qemu version we have to support to
qemu-3.1:
Debian 10/Stable: 3.1
OpenSUSE Leap 15.3: 5.2
Ubuntu 20.04: 4.2
RHEL/Centos 8.4: 4.2
Next event in this space will be 2023/07/06 when Debian 11 will be out
for two years.
It's actually much earlier than that :)
Quoting our platform support policy[1]:
The project aims to support the most recent major version at all
times. 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 (e.g. Debian
LTS); the same is true of repositories that contain packages
backported from later releases (e.g. Debian backports).
Looking at the Debian wiki[2] we can see
Version Code name Release date End of life date
10 Buster 2019-07-06 ~2022-08
which is consistent with what's written a few lines down
Reminder: the EOL date for the stable release is the date of the
next stable release plus one year.
So come August we'll be able to bump the minimum QEMU version
further, all the way to 4.2 :)
[1]
https://libvirt.org/platforms.html
[2]
https://wiki.debian.org/DebianReleases#Production_Releases
--
Andrea Bolognani / Red Hat / Virtualization