Sam Rosenfeld <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [2002-11-06 12:55:54 -0500]: > On Tue, Nov 05, 2002 at 09:59:46PM +1100, Nick Hastings wrote: > > your subject line asks what to add to apt.conf. ... the short > > answer is nothing, to upgrade using apt-get you need to edit > > /etc/apt/sources.list. Replace all instances of "potato" with "woody". > > Have been using "stable" in my /etc/apt/sources.list and now have switched to > woody. Can I use the same sources.list as I've used with potato and simply > replace "stable" with "woody"?
Today 'woody' _is_ 'stable'. You will find a symlink from one to the other. Therefore you certainly can change from one to the other without any problems as they are exactly the same. But stick with stable instead of the named release. I would stick with 'stable' so that when 'sarge' is released and becomes stable you will get the update "at that time". Yes, we know that sarge is not ready for release today. But when it does release in the future it will be better than the current woody and you will want it. Keeping 'stable' there facilitates keeping your system on the release considered the best 'stable' release of Debian. > Old sources.list > > deb http://http.us.debian.org/debian stable main contrib non-free > deb http://non-us.debian.org/debian-non-US stable/non-US main contrib non-free Looks great to me. I would leave it just like that. Make sure you have the security updates line added: deb http://security.debian.org/ stable/updates main The stable bits are stable in that they don't change. Therefore updates are placed elsewhere. This is the incremental delta to the frozen released bits. Bob
msg11384/pgp00000.pgp
Description: PGP signature