Santiago Vila <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > * "unstable" is actually frozen, which means uploads for unstable are > either discouraged, they remain in the limbo, or they are automatically > put in some other distribution above unstable, like new-unstable, until > testing or unstable becomes the new stable.
At which point there are *still* fixed bugs that don't make it into the release. They're fixed upstream, fixed in experimental, fixed in private working repositories that don't get uploaded due to the freeze, etc. There are also the bugs that people just don't notice. As near as I can tell (and I've had a package affected by this), the release team is doing a great job making sure that fixes that they know about propagate into sarge. There will be fixes they don't know about. There will be RC bugs found after the release. Debian is just far, far too large to be able to release a bug-free distribution. This isn't a serious problem; this is just life. If they're RC and actually significant (some of the missing dependencies are RC but not really that important for normal use scenarios), hopefully they can be fixed through proposed-updates. Let's not spend a bunch of time fretting about the last 1%. Doing something reasonable and then going with it will produce results that will be quite acceptable in practice. -- Russ Allbery ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) <http://www.eyrie.org/~eagle/> -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]