Comment by kstrauser 19 hours ago There’s no “basically”. Stick a fork in it; it’s done: https://www.python.org/doc/sunset-python-2/ 3 comments kstrauser Reply shakna 17 hours ago It might not be supported by the consortium, but python2 still lives, slowly, in one place or another:> The RHEL 8 AppStream Lifecycle Page puts the end date of RHEL 8's Python 2.7 package at June 2024.https://access.redhat.com/solutions/4455511At this point in RHEL it is only "deprecated", not "obsolete". wombatpm 13 hours ago In RHEL I would never touch system python at all, and would install what every version I needed in a venv and configure any software I installed to use what ever version I needed. I learned the hard way to never mess with system python. shmerl 18 hours ago Which is better than this mess with Lua situation.
shakna 17 hours ago It might not be supported by the consortium, but python2 still lives, slowly, in one place or another:> The RHEL 8 AppStream Lifecycle Page puts the end date of RHEL 8's Python 2.7 package at June 2024.https://access.redhat.com/solutions/4455511At this point in RHEL it is only "deprecated", not "obsolete". wombatpm 13 hours ago In RHEL I would never touch system python at all, and would install what every version I needed in a venv and configure any software I installed to use what ever version I needed. I learned the hard way to never mess with system python.
wombatpm 13 hours ago In RHEL I would never touch system python at all, and would install what every version I needed in a venv and configure any software I installed to use what ever version I needed. I learned the hard way to never mess with system python.
It might not be supported by the consortium, but python2 still lives, slowly, in one place or another:
> The RHEL 8 AppStream Lifecycle Page puts the end date of RHEL 8's Python 2.7 package at June 2024.
https://access.redhat.com/solutions/4455511
At this point in RHEL it is only "deprecated", not "obsolete".
In RHEL I would never touch system python at all, and would install what every version I needed in a venv and configure any software I installed to use what ever version I needed. I learned the hard way to never mess with system python.
Which is better than this mess with Lua situation.