{{{ Date: Tue, 30 Oct 2007 15:55:56 -0500 From: Troy Dawson To: scientific-linux-users scientific-linux-announce Subject: Scientific Linux 3 transitions into legacy mode, starting in December Starting on December 1, 2007, Scientific Linux 3 will begin it's transition into "Legacy Mode". What does this mean? How will it affect you? What does this mean? For several years we have said that we would stop support of Scientific Linux 3 on October 31, 2007. This is because we do not have the human resources to maintain so many major distributions of Scientific Linux. But several experiments have not been able to transition off of the Scientific Linux 3 platform for various reasons. "Legacy Mode" is a way for the main developers to drop the level of support, while still getting security updates to those experiments who have been unable to transition. In Legacy Mode we will only be supporting Scientific Linux 3.0.9. Our definition of support is "We will recompile and release the errata that The Upstream Vendor (TUV) releases for Enterprise 3. If one of our added packages has a critical security problem, we will fix it and release it." How will it affect you? We are encouraging everyone to migrate off Scientific Linux 3, but we understand that can be difficult. If you are unable to migrate off Scientific Linux 3, then you should migrate to the latest release, which is Scientific Linux 3.0.9. We also understand that we just released S.L. 3.0.9. We waited until the last month so that it would have all the latest errata and updates as possible before we went into Legacy Mode. Because we know that you can't just migrate all your machines at once, we have extended our normal support a month, and we are having a transition phase. The transition phase will last from December 1, 2007 though mid February 2008. Two things will happen in the transition phase. December 1, 2007 A new yum-conf for S.L. 301, 302, 303, 304, 305, 307, and 308. This new yum-conf will change both your cron.yum and your /etc/yum.conf. It will not change your release to become SL 309, but it will change the security update (errata) section to point to SL 309's security update area. This will allow you to continue to get security updates as you transition to SL 3.0.9. mid February 2008 S.L. 301, 302, 303, 304, 305, 307, and 308 will be moved into scientific/obsolete. From experience, we know that users and admins will continue to use SL 3 until we remove them. We also know, that for one reason or another, a user will need one file or another from an old release. Our solution for both problems is to move the old releases into a directory called obsolete. We currently do not know how long we will keep the releases in there before removing them. You can find answers to Frequently Asked Questions at https://www.scientificlinux.org/documentation/faq/legacy.sl3 We hope this transition into legacy mode goes smoothly for everyone. Troy Dawson }}}