The point is -- folks run RHEL for a stable base. But it is not just
a boxed
product. It's a platform. People should be able to
choose what they do with it, and not be stuck running old&stale EPEL
packages if they want some assurance of stability, however
minimal.
From a user standpoint, I think this is very true. I like the
stability of RHEL, but sometimes I do end up wanting a feature of a
recently updated upstream project, and either have to rebuild an SRPM
from Fedora, go to another repo or build from source.
Also, in my case with remind, it's not a library with an ABI that
people are linking against that might break, it's just an application.
I suppose a change in the feature-set could break remind scripts
however.
But having the option at least, and from a trustworthy source like
EPEL, to track somewhat-latest versions of packages of our choosing
would be nice.
But maybe it makes for too much of a grey area?
Ray