I'd like to discuss this before perhaps reporting it as a bug.
For example, on a fully updated CentOS 7 system:
Note above, this is not a vanilla PHP 5.4.16, this is Red Hat's 5.4.16-46.el7 (rebuilt by CentOS) that will receive full support until Q4 2020 and mission critical bugs and security support until June 30th, 2024. So more than 5 years of support left.
In Plesk's interface, PHP 5.4.16 by OS vendor gets reported as outdated to both the admin and the customers. Why is it being reported as such?
According to this Plesk article, this can't be turned off or adjusted either?
For example, on a fully updated CentOS 7 system:
Code:
# php -v
PHP 5.4.16 (cli) (built: Oct 30 2018 19:30:51)
# rpm -q php
php-5.4.16-46.el7.x86_64
Note above, this is not a vanilla PHP 5.4.16, this is Red Hat's 5.4.16-46.el7 (rebuilt by CentOS) that will receive full support until Q4 2020 and mission critical bugs and security support until June 30th, 2024. So more than 5 years of support left.
In Plesk's interface, PHP 5.4.16 by OS vendor gets reported as outdated to both the admin and the customers. Why is it being reported as such?
According to this Plesk article, this can't be turned off or adjusted either?
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