Pierre Habouzit <madco...@madism.org> writes: > On Mon, May 02, 2011 at 01:31:31PM +0200, Lucas Nussbaum wrote: >> Hi, >> >> Since I already sent too many mails in the 'rolling' discussion, I >> decided to send one more. Here is an attempt at a summary of what was >> said so far. It might not be complete, it's probably a bit biased, but I >> hope that it's still better than nothing. When replying, please try to >> focus on specific points, and change the subject accordingly. > > That's a decent summary of what was said I think. > > Though I feel that to make the discussion more solid, the following is > missing: > > - What are the problems you try to address with rolling? And no "the > users want it" isn't an answer, I'd reply "why do they want it" if > that's the answer I get.
I think "why do they want it" is the most important question. As mentioned many users feel that the software in stable is too old. On the other hand many users praise Debian for their long release cycle and stable/old-stable support. Those two groups are clearly expressing contradictory wishes. And maybe trying to find a solution that fits both isn't the right thing. To those users that want newer software my next question would be "What software?". My feeling there is that it is only some software, allways the same software and used for the same use case: KDE / Gnome / Multimedia stuff for the Desktop. Looking at the other group, those that cherish the slow release cycles and excelent stability and security support, shows a a large bias towards servers that are either completly headless or where people don't care about the latest sparkly desktop hype. They need to run and keep running without having to upgrade them every 6 month. If my impression is right then maybe there is something to say for having a desktop and a server flavour like other distributions. It would be wastefull to have a rolling release with all sources included if the users only need a subset. The desktop users only want the new sparkly KDE / Gnome / Multimedia stuff. They do not care about the latest coreutils or latest postgresql. So my idea would be to split pakages into 3 groups: core, desktop and server. We could then have "full" releases that update all sources (core+desktop+server) and "sparkly" releases that only update desktop [OK, so only 2 groups: long-term and short-term]. The desktop packages for sparkly releases would be build against the core packages from the last full release. They could be done as rolling releases or not. That option remains open. The point would be to greatly reduce the number of package updates involved in a sparkly release, to reduce it to those packages that matter, and therefore reduce the work needed to pull it off. Note: yes, this isn't exactly like other distributions having a desktop and server flavour. You would still have all the packages available in every release. The up-to-date-ness would differ, not the amount of installable packages. MfG Goswin -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-devel-requ...@lists.debian.org with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org Archive: http://lists.debian.org/87r58huhz4.fsf@frosties.localnet