The everliving Drupal 7

It’s Alive! Drupal 7 gets another year

Mike Carter
Ixis

--

The Drupal 7 news was a relief for editors, website administrators, IT Managers and all involved in website maintenance last week when the Drupal project announced they are extending the end of life for Drupal 7 platform for a further year.

Launched in 2011, Drupal 7 captured a huge market share of charities, businesses and independents that continue to represent over 550,000 websites running on the framework. Having already delayed the original end of life date in November 2020, and then November 2021 due to strains on business during the pandemic, the latest date agencies and users were working towards was November 2022. But that all changed in late February.

No need to panic!

Whilst Drupal 9 (and soon 10!) offer a great CMS experience and gain the benefit of adopting new features, security and contributed modules, it doesn’t mean Drupal 7 technically stops working and makes the sites running on the platform crippled.

“The teams that built and still maintain these legacy Drupal installations, and the end-users they serve, are important constituents of the Drupal community. Although these users should still plan their upgrade to a newer version of Drupal, if they are unable to upgrade before the currently announced end-of-life, it would not be responsible of us to leave them vulnerable.”

With the 550,000 sites in mind, the decision was made amongst the Drupal Security Team and Drupal Association to announce that moving forward, the scheduled Drupal 7 End-of-Life date will be re-evaluated annually.

How long do we have left?

The evaluation and decision to extend community security support for an additional year is published by July each year — July 2023 being the next. Factors that are considered in this decision are community support, Drupal 7 usage, and active Drupal 7 volunteer maintainers.

What happened to Drupal Extended Support?

Once the official Drupal support comes to an end the plan is to hand over the security maintenance duties to a small group of independent agencies who have clients still depending on complex Drupal 7 builds. This is known as the D7 Extended Support (D7ES) vendor program.

It is also possible that a new approach or model is developed based on input from the Drupal community. Whatever is decided, at least 6 months’ notice will be given before any new deadline goes into force.

So what happens now?

Find out more over at the Ixis blog post about Drupal 7 end of life and what you should still be planning to do.

--

--

Mike Carter
Ixis
Editor for

Mike Carter: a Drupal enthusiast. PHP Coder.