Am 25. Jul, 2002 schwätzte Jay so: > So, my workstation has been running Debian for a while, and my > sources.list has been pointed at the testing branch. With 3.0 becomming > stable recently, the branch that was testing is now stable. However, I > never changed my sources.list - I just figured I would leave it pointing > to testing. This leaves me with a few questions for the Debian pros out > there: > > * How stable is the new testing branch? I know that unstable is just that As stable as it will be. No more. No less. :) > - unstable. However, the testing branch has always been very stable (for > as long as I've been using Debian anyway). Is that branch always very > stable (relatively speaking), or has it just been that way for the last > ~12 months because the official stable branch was so old? The 'testing' branch has only existed for about 18 months. It was a new phenomenon after potato was released. I would be cautious. With testing you should always be cautious anyway. > * When I ran apt-get dist-upgrade yesterday, there were no packages. The > same thing today resulted in 400+ upgraded packages to install. Obviously > the new "testing" branch has kicked in. Should I change my sources.list > file to the stable branch, or is it safe/stable to leave it pointing at > the testing branch? I've changed my preferences to lock in stable for now. I'll move to testing again later when I have a reason to do so. That's what I recommend for others as well. testing should be fairly stable, though. I have some reservations for the next couple of weeks as this is mostly the first rollover, but since it's automated it should go quite smoothly. ciao, der.hans -- # https://www.LuftHans.com/ # Use PLUG form to get into the Phoenix IT Business Expo Thu and Fri. # https://www.LuftHans.com/tmp/ITBizExpoTixForm.html # It's up to the reader to make the book interesting. # An author has only the opportunity to make it uninteresting. - der.hans