On Thu, 2007-08-30 at 20:05 -0400, Tim Hull wrote: > Hi, > > About a month ago I inquired here as to what Debian is doing regarding > backported updates for stable releases. I did get some good responses > to that thread, and I see why Debian doesn't expend too much energy > making significant updates (like new GNOME, Xorg, etc etc) to *stable* > releases - it would make them *un*stable. > > However, this still leaves the question of bugfixes and hardware > support updates - things that, while not necessarily "new-toolchain" > complexity, are mostly excluded by the current updates policy. As of > now, there is no way for stable users to get many bugfixes or support > for hardware released recently (basically anything since fall of last > year) without resorting to installing testing/unstable packages or > unsupported packages, all of which are not security supported.
There are plans for an "etch + 1/2" release which would update the kernel and X server to support newer hardware. I don't what the status or timetable for this is. > In my case, this has been quite a pain, as I have had to backport the > kernel and about 5 auxiliary packages from testing/unstable to get > reasonable functionality on my machine (a MacBook). Why not use backports.org? > I've also had to backport libgksu to get a fix for a problem which > causes there to be an extremely high amount of CPU wakeups when gksu > is used (as that kills battery life). > > Is there any plans to work on supporting such issues in the stable > release, either through -volatile or the release updates? <snip> Only release-critical bugs are fixed in a stable release. You can get non-critical fixes for some packages by selective use of backports.org. Ben. -- Ben Hutchings When you say `I wrote a program that crashed Windows', people just stare ... and say `Hey, I got those with the system, *for free*'. - Linus Torvalds
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