Hey Luke, Jonas, On Fri, Nov 03, 2017 at 08:31:33PM +0000, Luke Dashjr wrote: > > >> I believe Bitcoin is now stable enough for stable release. > > > Things have only gotten less stable upstream since 2013... > > Please provide references supporting that.
0.15 is certainly "stable" in the sense that it's a well-maintained piece of software, but it's not stable in the sense that it should be reliably used without changes over a period of years. For instance 0.15.1 is currently being prepared to work around p2p problems that are expected within a couple of weeks. > > > What is the plan for getting security and protocol change updates > > > backported to Debian stable? > > Debian standard procedures for updating stable packages. > In my experience, that has been "never update, even when fixes are available" > except for highly-visible security issues. :( Not sure if there's something more up to date, but https://lists.debian.org/debian-devel-announce/2016/11/msg00009.html says: * Fixes must be minimal and relevant and include a sufficiently detailed changelog entry which seems like it generally precludes uploading new upstream releases (0.14 to 0.15 at least, perhaps 0.15 to 0.15.1 would be fine). I don't think upstream will generally be providing sufficiently "minimal and relevant" backports to satisfy that rule... AIUI, stable-updates is a subset of proposed-updates, so it's not easier to get in there than regular updates to stable? (If the release team are willing to accept new upstream releases into stable or stable-updates, this seems like a good idea; it just doesn't seem like they would be as far as I can see?) Cheers, aj