On Friday 17 April 2015 11:36:26 Darac Marjal wrote: > On Thu, Apr 16, 2015 at 04:25:41PM -0500, David Wright wrote: > > Quoting Joe (j...@jretrading.com): > > > On Thu, 16 Apr 2015 21:11:06 +0100 > > > > > > Lisi Reisz <lisi.re...@gmail.com> wrote: > > > > As opposed to problems in a fortnight? If you change all of them, > > > > you will have a whirlwind as soon as Jessie becomes Stable. If I > > > > were in your shoes, I would change the one reference to testing to > > > > Jessie. Track Jessie into next month and change all references to > > > > Jessie to testing or Stretch then, when things have calmed down a > > > > little. > > > > > > > > > Running `aptitude update' with the changes in place does not > > > > > produce any output that looks problematice (to me). But maybe that > > > > > is not a thorough test? > > > > > > > > It's no test at all. At the moment testing and Jessie are the same > > > > thing. > > > > > > > > But it will be awful the day that Jessie goes Stable because > > > > everything will immediately update willy-nilly and out of your > > > > control, all at once, to Stretch (which will be the new testing). > > > > > > > > I really should wait a few days if I were you. If I were me I would > > > > wait at least a month! > > > > > > However long the wait, the result will be the same. In fact, the longer > > > the wait, the more upgrades there will be in one go. > > > > This may be true, but there's a difference. If you wait a few months > > in jessie before moving to stretch, a lot more people will have tried > > the latter and discussed, maybe fixed, the bugs that crop up. > > Just a thought: What do you think people have been doing for the last > five months? > > Jessie froze on the 5th of November 2014. At that point, the idea of the > released software is clearly defined. The only changes allowed after a > freeze (as per the Freeze Policy) are: fixes for critical *bugs*, fixes > for important *bugs* (and then, only until 5th December), translation > updates and pre-approved fixes (until the 5th January). > > I've highlighted those changes which are driven by bugs. Now, the main > way to find bugs is for people to TEST the operating system. That means > installing it, using it, adapting it to their needs, updating the > applications or services which they run atop debian and so on. If > everyone followed your advice, Jessie would sit on a shelf for five > months then someone would come along and say "Yes, this has ripened long > enough" and then it'd be marked as "stable" and people would say "Why > didn't you spot this glaring bug?" > > On the day of release, Debian is saying "This set of packages, at these > versions, have been tested, approved and we believe they are good enough > for *everyone* to use". If you don't trust that, then why are you using > Debian in the first place?
He is suggesting using Jessie. I don't get your problem. Lisi -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-user-requ...@lists.debian.org with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org Archive: https://lists.debian.org/201504171304.15269.lisi.re...@gmail.com