Thijs Kinkhorst schrieb:
On Thu, June 14, 2007 13:39, Marc Delisle wrote:
phpMyAdmin has been invited by a group of well-known open source projects to participate in an initiative that is meant to promote PHP 5 and break the cycle where web hosts are not encouraged to upgrade to 5 because apps works on 4.
Specifically, if we agree to this, effective 5 February 2008, any new-feature release will have a minimum required PHP version of 5.2.0.
I like the idea of a group of projects doing this (so no one is penalized by being the first); I am in favor of this and would like your feedback.
I'm not a member of the development team, but I'm missing the most important thing here: what are the concrete gains??
less code better code taking advantage of many new features/functions in PHP 5 speed (not emulating functionality in userspace implemented native in PHP functions) less testing less bugs
making life easier for us developers resulting in more power to develop new functionality for phpMyAdmin
The most concrete drawback is that it will be hurting those users who have no control over their host's PHP config or have other reasons not to upgrade to PHP 5 yet.
so i could ask back: what should this reasons be? btw. it is not difficult ot run two PHP versions (4 and 5) on one host
[...]
And if you decide to move to PHP5 only, how will PHP4-bound users be security-supported?
i don't think that it is a problem to maintain a security branch for PHP 4 version of phpMyAdmin
don't forgat, we are tlaking about 2008!