![]() ![]() By “official” they mean “what we’ve committed to provide on a best efforts basis”. Most of them are not paid for this work, and there are no contractual obligations or service level agreements requiring them to ensure that an application written 10 years ago will run with the current release. Perl 5 is maintained by a group of volunteers who’s primary interest is the development of a useful, stable, modern implementation of the language. While there’s nothing particularly broken about the latest releases of Perl 5.8 and 5.10, if something were broken or vulnerable, the perl5-porters won’t be fixing it “officially”. We used an analogy about stale bread to illustrate the point, but someone on reddit summed it up much more succinctly: “ The good stuff is free, the old broken stuff will cost you“. Last year, We wrote a post about our rationale for removing older builds from Community Edition. When the underlying Perl version becomes “unsupported” by the Perl community itself, support for and access to the corresponding ActivePerl versions will be limited to Team, Business and Enterprise Tier subscription customers only. We’re bringing ActivePerl Community Edition in line with the maintenance and support policy of the perl5-porters. These versions can be licensed by our Team Tier (or higher) subscribers, although no support or maintenance is provided. ActivePerl Community Edition 5.8 and 5.10 are no longer available for free download. ![]()
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