<div dir="ltr"><div>At the summit in Vancouver there were sessions discussing Extended
Maintenance. The general focus was on keeping upstream branches open in
extended maintenance mode after 18 months rather than EOLing them. If
at some point fixes cannot land in a given project's branch, and there
is no reasonable solution, then the branch would need to be EOL'd for
that project.</div><div><br></div>Personally I think this is great. In Ubuntu we
want all fixes to land upstream first for supported releases, but once
upstream branches reach EOL, we end up carrying local patches in our
packages. I assume other distros do the same, so any sharing we can do
here would make shorter work for all involved.<br><br>During the first
EM session, David Ames mentioned that perhaps distros could coordinate
on what releases will be their LTS's to enable more focus on specific EM
branches and Doug Hellman suggested an email to the list. I don't know
how other distros choose their OpenStack LTS's or if anything will
change from distro to distro but it seems to be worth a discussion.<br><br>I'm
going to give an overview of the Ubuntu OpenStack LTS releases below
(current and planned). What are other distros' LTS's (current and
planned) and do we line up at all?<br><br>Ubuntu LTS (for background)<br>------------------------------<wbr>--------<br>Every 2 years in April a new Ubuntu LTS is released and support supported for 5 years. For example:<br>* Ubuntu 16.04 - released in April 2016; supported until April 2021<br>* Ubuntu 18.04 - released in April 2018; supported until April 2023<br>* Ubuntu 20.04 - released in April 2020; supported until April 2025<br><br>Ubuntu OpenStack LTS<br>------------------------------<wbr>-<br>Ubuntu OpenStack LTS is provided in 3 different scenarios:<br>1) Each Ubuntu LTS supports the most recent release of OpenStack available at the time of the release for 5 years.<br>2) Each N-1 Ubuntu LTS supports that same release --^ of OpenStack for 3 years.<br>3) Each Ubuntu LTS supports the latest release of OpenStack that is available as of April of odd years for 3 years.<br><br>Examples of 1:<br>* Ubuntu 16.04 - OpenStack Mitaka supported for 5 years (via Ubuntu 16.04 archive)<br>* Ubuntu 18.04 - OpenStack Queens supported for 5 years (via Ubuntu 18.04 archive)<br>* Ubuntu 20.04 - OpenStack U***** supported for 5 years (via Ubuntu 20.04 archive) [1]<br><br>Examples of 2:<br>* Ubuntu 14.04 - OpenStack Mitaka supported for 3 years (via Ubuntu Cloud Archive)<br>* Ubuntu 16.04 - OpenStack Queens supported for 3 years (via Ubuntu Cloud Archive)<br>* Ubuntu 18.04 - OpenStack U***** supported for 3 years (via Ubuntu Cloud Archive) [1]<br><br>Examples of 3:<br>* Ubuntu 16.04 - OpenStack Ocata supported for 3 years (via Ubuntu Cloud Archive)<br>* Ubuntu 18.04 - OpenStack Stein supported for 3 years (via Ubuntu Cloud Archive) [1]<br><br>[1] Future OpenStack release; assumes the same OpenStack release cadence continues<br><br>If you'd like to see a visual of this release cadence, there's a chart at <a href="https://www.ubuntu.com/info/release-end-of-life" target="_blank">https://www.ubuntu.com/info/<wbr>release-end-of-life</a> under "Ubuntu OpenStack release end of life".<br><br>Thanks,<br>Corey<br></div>