Nick Jennings wrote:

> This brings up a question I have. Isn't testing technically the *last*
> of stable/testing/unstable to get security fixes? 

        Correct.

> security fixes for stable are packported immediately, and the fixes are
> also incorporated into unstable asap. Now for testing, there would be
> at least a delay of a week for it to pass through unstable correct?
> 
> This is annoying, because testing is acutally in most cases in a 
> pretty stable state, and would be good for many production environments
> except for the fact that security fixes take the longest to get
> incorporated.
> 
> Can anyone verify this?

        This is one of the reasons why I use APT's pinning and default release 
feature. With testing *and* unstable entries in /etc/apt/sources.list 
plus the line 'APT::Default-Release "testing";' in /etc/apt/apt.conf, 
'apt-get [install|upgrade|dist-upgrade]' defaults to retrieving testing 
packages. 'apt-get install foo -t unstable' will install package foo and 
all of its dependencies from sid onto an otherwise woody installation. 
 From then on, apt retrieves updates of foo and its dependencies from 
unstable until the version installed moves over to testing.  Very nice 
and handy for the bug fixes you just don't want to wait for.


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