As is oft said of Debian: Debian releases when it's darn good and ready. :-)
This is unlike many other distros, which release like clockwork, ready or not. Though for many years now, Debian has had a schedule on at least certain freezes. So that does at least give one indications when test starts working more towards actually becoming the next stable release. For more information, you may want to have a look at: https://wiki.debian.org/DebianTrixie Like earlier stable releases, expect that page to get many more detailed updates as it comes closer and closer to release. I notice also, linked from there: https://release.debian.org/trixie/freeze_policy.html Which may provide more useful information. As testing gets (much) closer to actual release, it will get to the point where the release date will be known, and I expect, per usual, it will also be found on https://wiki.debian.org/DebianTrixie and relevant list(s), etc. Notably as there's a lot that has to happen and be coordinated for the actual release itself, so when it's otherwise ready for release, the actual release will be scheduled some moderate bit in advance, so all the needed pieces and actions for the actual release are then coordinated and lined up to make the actual release happen. On Sun, Jun 8, 2025 at 1:03 AM <longwi...@yahoo.com> wrote: > where can I find such info?