On 23 Jul 2024 01:27 +0500, from cybertat...@gmail.com (타토카): > I know what PAM is. I understand what the problem is described on the > website. But I think if I get Debian Sid Update and after that PAM will > crash, I just want to know what the solution can be for it.
You have mentioned at least twice that you have read this somewhere on the Debian web site. Well, there is _literally_ well into the millions of web pages (if by web page you mean unique content accessible through discrete URLs) on the Debian web site. The bug tracker alone has over a million entries in total, many of which are likely far out of date and most of which almost certainly consisting of multiple discrete posts from different people. The mailing list archives almost certainly have millions of posts in between all the different lists hosted by the Debian project. If there is something in _particular_ that you are worried about which you read on the Debian web site, you'll need to provide a link to where you read it. Otherwise everyone here is just guessing. > I am interested > in Debian Sid. But I just want to Insure myself of problems, which happened > in the past or could happen in the future. _There is no guarantee whatsoever that Sid won't give you problems._ That's pretty much the whole point of Sid: to serve as a testbed where breakage is allowed and expected, where problems can be sorted out before they get into Testing; and Testing, in turn, goes into a stabilization phase before it becomes the next Stable roughly once every two years as of late. (It's not quite that tidy in practice, but that's the gist of it.) In the words of <https://www.debian.org/releases/sid/>: > "sid" is subject to massive changes and in-place library updates. > This can result in a very "unstable" system which contains packages > that cannot be installed due to missing libraries, dependencies that > cannot be fulfilled etc. Use it at your own risk! Yes, some people do use Sid as a daily driver. But one really shouldn't do that _without_ solid knowledge of Linux in general and Debian in particular, and a willingness to help solve problems. I've been using Linux as a daily driver OS for close to a quarter century and consider myself fairly adept at it; and I wouldn't run Sid, mostly because I actually need my computer to do _other_ things. -- Michael Kjörling 🔗 https://michael.kjorling.se “Remember when, on the Internet, nobody cared that you were a dog?”