Hi, I am still at that intense early learning stage. I keep these two machines at home firmly in "stable". I upgrade regularly with dselect and add and remove packages as I come to terms with all this.
Recently I have started to wonder how all this works with a major change, such as when "woody" becomes "stable". Will I just find that when I upgrade my packages one day that I have gone from "potato" to "woody"? That in itself is fine by me, but does the dselect method work for changes of kernel and similar key files? If the kernel is changed am I then going to have to edit lilo by hand? Does it replace the default kernel? Does it remove the old one? None of these things bother me too much, I just want to know what to expect. I have read what I can find, but can't quite tease out the answers I am looking for. Basically, when there is a new stable version, what does the "stable-only" user have to do to remain current? Oh yes, I have one other question. I was in conversation with someone recently and might have misunderstood what was said, but when a package is reported in the "debian-security-announce" list, does and "update-upgrade" get the package from the stable group, or is there, as was suggested to me a separate site for security fixes that I should have in my sources list? I really like this way of staying up-to-date, but I just want to make sure I am doing it right, and making the most of the maintainers efforts Keith -- ------------------------------------------------------------------------ [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Keith O'Connell) ------------------------------------------------------------------------