On Sat, 06 Sep 2003 12:46:31 +0200 "Stefan Waidele jun." <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > But with debian-unstable the chance of 'getting the workstation hosed' > during and 'apt-get upgrade' is greater than with debian-testing, isn't it?
So don't do an apt-get upgrade. First install apt-listchanges and apt-listbugs. With those you see what's changed and if something has a grave bug filed against it a prompt on whether or not to install it. Then after that just don't do a mass upgrade all that often. Only upgrade what you have to when you have to. IE, security things and packages that you absolutely need the latest on. Let the rest upgrade by proxy off the packages you do upgrade. Every once in a while do a careful aptitude upgrade to bring the rest of the packages up to speed. Following those rules I've had my server running on unstable for well over a year with no serious problems. I've also had workstations riding unstable for over 2 years like that. It just takes some judicious monitoring. Oh, and learn how to downgrade packages from unstable to testing if needed. -- Steve C. Lamb | I'm your priest, I'm your shrink, I'm your PGP Key: 8B6E99C5 | main connection to the switchboard of souls. -------------------------------+---------------------------------------------
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