#Linux 6.6 just became a #Longterm (aka #LTS) #kernel.
The #LinuxKernel's stable team (Sasha Levin and @gregkh) just made this official by adding it to https://www.kernel.org/category/releases.html with the following change: https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/docs/kernel/website.git/commit/?id=d3c85f300d9214949efae275e519f30cce155cca
Projected EOL is December 2026.
@kernellogger @gregkh Any plans to reinstate Tuz for 6.6.6 ;)?
@kernellogger @gregkh wouldn't have expected 6.6 to end up as an LTS given the large core changes with the Scheduler, but I am glad to see it happen, never the less.
2/ And in case anyone wonders:
This means that next years #Linux longterm #kernel will be[1] #LinuxKernel 6.12, unless something odd happens.
[1] because (a) the last release of a year is almost always declared a longterm kernel these days (b) new mainline versions these days are almost always released every 63 (in roughly about 60% of the cases) or 70 (~40%) days
3/ for details on claim (b) see the chart below which you can also find here: https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1_yH7lFmZxAoSWrtsd8tGu3befG4zIcMnytB1ml4pQQM/edit#gid=1170907286&range=A129
But please don't check the percentages given, they are just a while guess from the data, I did not check for real; but for the calc in the previous toot that's good enough I'd say.
@kernellogger I think I remember @gregkh explicitly saying, that he choose certain versions over others als LTS due to such considerations
@kernellogger I was kinda hoping that it would be Kernel 6.6.6. π π
4/ And in case anyone wonders:
Yes, the projected EOL in December 2026 will mean that 6.6.y will be supported *three* years in total, and not *two*, which since about nearly a year is the new official expected support timeframe for longterm kernels[1].
I'm pretty sure the stable team did this to not end support for 6.6 before 6.1 becomes EOL.
Hence next years longterm kernel will likely be the first since a while that will only get two years of support.
[1] https://fosstodon.org/@corbet@social.kernel.org/111104918436086518
@hyeyoo @kernellogger @gregkh @vbabka F*'em obsolete users! If a retard still used SLAB in 6.5, they probably also ran it on an Itaniumβ¦ π
@gregkh @kernellogger This commit https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/docs/kernel/website.git/commit/?id=5cca06606a7dcb2a0a6b6a818072b81b21287b3b says "As a first step of going back to 2 year LTS releases"
@gregkh @kernellogger In February you set 6.1 at 4 years; I think people were scared the _next_ one (i.e. 6.6) was going to be 2 years.
maybe, but I don't think so.
I think the "Longterm is going back to 2 years per release" news only reached some people[1], but the wider public only learned about it through @corbet's talk and OSSEU[2].
[1] I shared it here, but I think it wasn't even made a proper news entry on @LWN
[2] https://fosstodon.org/@corbet@social.kernel.org/111104918436086518