Robert Millan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: [..] > - Automatical major updates (the x in 2.x.y). When 2.6 is suitable to be > the default version, a simple change in -defaults package (ala > gcc) would enforce updating on all existing systems that use this > method. This prevents us from encountering ABI incompatibility > problems, like this recent one in Glibc: > #215010: Illegal instruction with 2.2 kernel
> This is not unusual. IIRC, Woody's Glibc wasn't supported by Linux > 2.0 (I once tried an upgrade from Slink after the Woody release) > Note: as pointed by Andreas, this doesn't apply to minor updates I don't think automatic (as in unless you press ctrl-C or set the package on hold) major kernel-upgrades are wise, they should only be done on user-request, when the the user has time to take care of it. All my major kernel-upgrades required manual intervention, as I always had to change the module options and configuration. (With 2.6 there is sysfs and the abolishment of ide-scsi). cu andreas -- Hey, da ist ein Ballonautomat auf der Toilette! Unofficial _Debian-packages_ of latest unstable _tin_ http://www.logic.univie.ac.at/~ametzler/debian/tin-snapshot/