On Sat, Jun 10, 2023 at 06:52:59PM -0400, songbird wrote: > David Christensen wrote: > > debian-user: > > > > $ date > > Sat Jun 10 14:50:40 PDT 2023 > > > > > > The "Download" link on the Debian home page is currently broken: > > > > https://www.debian.org/ > > > > -> Download > ... > > there are also other artifacts happening which i hope > will eventually be corrected as the release process gets > completed. > > > ===== > # apt-get update > Hit:1 http://http.us.debian.org/debian sid InRelease > Get:2 http://http.us.debian.org/debian testing InRelease [108 kB] > Get:3 http://deb.debian.org/debian-debug testing-debug InRelease [32.1 kB] > Hit:4 http://security.debian.org testing-security InRelease > > Hit:5 http://deb.debian.org/debian-debug unstable-debug InRelease > > Reading package lists... Done > E: Repository 'http://deb.debian.org/debian-debug testing-debug InRelease' > changed its 'Codename' value from 'bookworm-debug' to 'trixie-debug' > N: This must be accepted explicitly before updates for this repository can be > applied. See apt-secure(8) manpage for details. > E: Repository 'http://http.us.debian.org/debian testing InRelease' changed > its 'Codename' value from 'bookworm' to 'trixie' > N: This must be accepted explicitly before updates for this repository can be > applied. See apt-secure(8) manpage for details. > ===== > > i don't use the codenames in my apt sources list because i > do not want to deal with changes like this happening. it > should all just work[tm]... >
A litle bit of history: the reasone we HAVE codenames is to sort this out. There wasn't a Debian 1.0 because someone put out a "1.0" when there was just about 0.97. Using testing and stable leads to a flag day when there's a major release. If you tie to a codename, this can follow on for up to five years. All the very best, as ever, andy Cater > > songbird >