On Fri, 9 Jan 1998, Mike Garfias wrote: > Any idea when 2.0 will be out? I'm tempted to start playing with the > unstable release, but was hoping to avoid that. I'm just sick of > having to download and compile all the packages that available for > glibc (which I don't have).
2.0 will be released when it's ready :-) But that doesn't mean you have to wait. The good news is that "unstable" is stable enough to use now (imo it has been stable enough since around august). if you don't mind the odd bit of minor weirdness (e.g. xload has temporarily disappeared) then go ahead and upgrade to unstable. follow the instructions in Scott Ellis' mini-HOWTO or use the auto upgrade script which was posted to debian-user yesterday. the howto is at: http://www.gate.net/~storm/FAQ/libc5-libc6-Mini-HOWTO.html read this, and then download scott's autoup "package" (which contains my upgrade script and all the required packages in one 6.7MB tar.gz file) from: http://stormcrow.ml.org/pub/debian/autoup/ OR ftp://stormcrow.ml.org/pub/debian/autoup/ the auto upgrade script will safely upgrade libc5, and install libc6 plus the new libc6 versions of libreadline, ncurses, bash, dpkg and perl. Once that's done, you can use dselect to upgrade the reset of the packages in your system. *ALL* of the old -dev and -dbg development packages will have been uninstalled (in order to get libc5 & 6 installed), so you will have to re-install them if you need to do any development work. WARNING NOTE: ------------- If you want to upgrade your own personal workstation then go ahead and do it, there is little to lose. if you want to upgrade a production server then get some experience with the bo to hamm upgrade on an unimportant machine (i always upgrade my workstation and my network at home before i upgrade any of my servers at work as a test run) before deciding whether to upgrade the server or not. Once you've got your system upgrade to unstable, you may want to run dselect and do an upgrade once every week or two. unstable is called unstable because it's a moving target (on any given day, the snapshot of unstable in the ftp archive may or may not install cleanly) not because it is necessarily more likely to crash your machine. BTW, if you do decide to upgrade to unstable, remember to take notes and post your experiences to [EMAIL PROTECTED] Craig -- craig sanders -- TO UNSUBSCRIBE FROM THIS MAILING LIST: e-mail the word "unsubscribe" to [EMAIL PROTECTED] . Trouble? e-mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED] .