the systemd package. When looking at the github repo, the version is done by incrementing the version number by one, each release. in centos repo it's done like: 219.73......219.74.... etc. in github repo it's 219....220....221...how does one correlate the versions together?
Basically CentOS up to CentOS 8 would pin a major version for the release like CentOS 8.1 might have <package>-5.0.1 and subsequent updates would generally by maintenance/security updates, but will all be <package>-5.x.x
centos is no more right ??
I see no more reason to use CentOS past CentOS 8. CentOS Stream could be OK, but I prefer my OS to be predictable
i see, so basically centos team cherrypicks updates and applies them to the packages from upstream source?
Remember, up to CentOS 8 it used to be downstream from RHEL
It's on life-support, it's basically dead.
CentOS 7 -> 2024 CentOS 8 -> 2021
Nope, that is a misunderstanding
Is it though? CentOS as we knew it is no more.
CentOS Stream is literally what RHEL has been up to now in terms of stability.
CentOS and RHEL has just swapped places in terms of functionality.
Except it seems to be a rolling release implementation
I see CentOS Stream 8 with defined end of life
The jury is still out on that, RH has not quite been transparent with exactly if and how CentOS Stream is or isn't rolling release.
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