On Sat, 17 Nov 2007 00:24, [EMAIL PROTECTED] said: > Were these problems with the compiler being more strict, or with > it being more buggy? They are both inconvenient but they aren't
I can't remember in detail. It was more a problem of changed libraries. Actually nits but changing this in several packages is a bit of work anyway. My fear is that other problems will come up with future releases. > We had 21 months between the 3.4.5 release and the current 4.2.1 > candidate, so I wouldn't quite describe the pace of change as frantic. > Making it available now gives us plenty of time to assess its viability > for Lenny. Well, I antitiapted that more releases will be done. But that does not seem to be the case. Good. > Yes, the linux kernel team have long done this. They recommend a > known specific compiler and other people ignore them and find any > bugs that shake out. But for production use, bet on the recommended > compiler. With Windows it is worse because we can't get our hands on large parts of the OS to debug or fix problems ;-) > It is frozen, its just frozen in etch. If you can't just install > those and have them work, and you really need them, then it shouldn't > be too hard to maintain a 'forward port' in some public location. Fair enough. > for the next Debian release. So the package structure isn't > quite suitable for that as is, but it should be possible to fix > that too... You may just change the CPU part of the name (i{4,5,6,}86-lin*,) or add something to it. That should allow to install old versions. My build scripts will cope fine with that. > Are you still actually having problems with 4.2.1, or just > hoping (as we all do) that they won't be repeated too often? The latter. Salam-Shalom, Werner -- Die Gedanken sind frei. Auschnahme regelt ein Bundeschgesetz. -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]