> I have been looking at the Sourceforge page and am confused as to
> what is the latest stable release as opposed to an experimental one.
>
I'm just a Bacula user, not developer, but I would consider Bacula quite a
mature and stable software. Like any software, it has some bugs that will be
found some day, and they got fixed (very soon, IMHO). Some brand new
features are also developed, but as far as you don't get your software from
the CVS but from the released versions area, I wouldn't any more call any
release "experimental".

Question of "being stable" is also related to your environment, which you
didn't mention. If you plan to use Bacula on an OS similar to the one the
developers use (RedHat-based FCx Linux, AFAIK), you propably get a more
stable system. If you plan to use some other OS that Bacula has been ported
to (like HP-UX, FreeBSD, Solaris, etc) things may be different.


Regards,
Timo




-------------------------------------------------------
This SF.Net email is sponsored by xPML, a groundbreaking scripting language
that extends applications into web and mobile media. Attend the live webcast
and join the prime developer group breaking into this new coding territory!
http://sel.as-us.falkag.net/sel?cmd=lnk&kid=110944&bid=241720&dat=121642
_______________________________________________
Bacula-users mailing list
Bacula-users@lists.sourceforge.net
https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/bacula-users

Reply via email to