This is the reality of having lots of open source dependencies. Important changes/bugs may exist, and the maintainers are under no obligation to fix them to suit your business needs. If you want them fixed, you contribute to the code base (or fork it) and fix it.
Still better than my last programming job where the vendor of a vital piece of HW had provided a C++ API (also vital), but refused to provide dlls that would work in anything newer than VS2010. At least with open source you can do something about it.
Still better than my last programming job where the vendor of a vital piece of HW had provided a C++ API (also vital), but refused to provide dlls that would work in anything newer than VS2010. At least with open source you can do something about it.