On Thu, Nov 15, 2001 at 11:22:42 +, Johnny Ernst Nielsen wrote:
> But will Woody always be testing? Or will Woody become stable and will
> some new name be assigned to the next testing?
The latter. IIRC, the new testing tree will be named 'sarge'.
Ray
--
USDoJ/Judge Jackson: "Microsoft has p
On Thu, Nov 15, 2001 at 11:22:42AM +, Johnny Ernst Nielsen wrote:
> A bit off topic:
> Sid is unstable and will always be.
> But will Woody always be testing? Or will Woody become stable and will some
> new name be assigned to the next testing?
The way I understand it is that Sid is the boy ne
>> | > Where does "potato" leave off and "woody" begin?
>> |
>> | Potato = stable = 2.2r?
>>
>> yes.
>>
>> | woody = testing = version 2.3
>>
>> I heard "3.0" was going to be woody's number.
I heard that too.
>> | sid = unstable = 2.(4)? I would guess
>>
>> sid/unstable doesn't get a number
>2.2Rev4 is the version number of the Debian distribution itself. And, since
>it is 2.2something, that makes it "Potato".
Yes, any Debian 2.2 revision is Potato.
The Debian distribution published in a new revision every time there is a
major chunk of security updates that makes it worth publishi
Here, ill help. The kernel number has nothing to do with the distro number.
Kernel 2.2.x or 2.4.x works with potato, woody, or sid.
On 14-Nov-2001, dman wrote:
> On Wed, Nov 14, 2001 at 10:20:38PM -0500, Wayne Topa wrote:
> | Rafe B.([EMAIL PROTECTED]) is reported to have said:
>
> | > Where do
On Wed, Nov 14, 2001 at 10:20:38PM -0500, Wayne Topa wrote:
| Rafe B.([EMAIL PROTECTED]) is reported to have said:
| > Where does "potato" leave off and "woody" begin?
|
| Potato = stable = 2.2r?
yes.
| woody = testing = version 2.3
I heard "3.0" was going to be woody's number.
| sid = unstab
Rafe B.([EMAIL PROTECTED]) is reported to have said:
>
> Gad, I'm real confused.
>
> I can roughly grok the difference between
> stable, unstable, etc.
>
> But what's this business of "2.2r3" and "2.2r4"?
Debian release numbers. 2.2r3 = Potato 3 upgrades
>
> How does this relate to the versio
Rafe,
It's simple.
2.2Rev4 is the version number of the Debian distribution itself. And, since
it is 2.2something, that makes it "Potato". (As it says on the Debian site,
each release has a code name from the movie, Toy Story.)
Each of the four thousand-odd software packages which make up a
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