Cliff Pfeifer wrote:
Like I said, we missed it, then fixed it as soon we became aware. The PHP website states in January of last year that it's no longer supported and 5.3 should be used. I'll take their word for it regardless of how many people aren't aware of it. Why hosts continue to force people to use it is a mystery I will never understand.
If you're deploying updated software to live websites without doing any of your own testing before hand then the consequences are yours alone. It would take maybe 5 minutes to download a backup of the gantry folder from your website, install the new version, then upload the backup if you had an issue.
Bottom line is no matter how extensively we test, every user has a different scenario, a different setup, different plugins ECT. We can't accommodate every different possibility. If you're worried about time and money, doing proper testing of your own and performing updates, backups and maintenance in a proper way will save you a lot headaches.
Your comments are offensive, Cliff. You assume quite a bit, and clearly haven't even tested your own assumptions. I did create a backup prior to the upgrade (as I always do). When it failed, I tried restoring just the gantry folder. No dice; I had to restore a complete backup and my SQL DB. Maybe you should spend a little more time with your software before assuming that your customers don't know what they're talking about.
Furthermore, it doesn't really matter what version PHP says to use if your customer base isn't using it. Market conditions have to inform your development strategies, Cliff, or you'll have a lot more situations like this.