On Thu, 2007-05-03 at 21:44 -0400, Max Hyre wrote: > Gentlefolk: > > The discussion of `stable' vs. `etch' vs. `lenny' > vs. ... got me to thinking. Is there any reason to offer > `stable' as an entry in sources.list? Its drawback seems to > be: > > o Every so often `stable' whacks you with about > seventeen million updates, with the chance that you'll > be left dead in the water. > > Using the name (`sarge', e.g.) has the drawback that: > > o Eventually a named distro will drop off the end of the > world, and get no more security updates. > > OTOH, `unstable' is a necessary warning sign: Here be > dragons. Someone starting with Debian needs to know that > unstable has more surprises. (Though, in my experience, > they're mostly like the ones you find in a box of Cracker > Jacks.) > > So, my modest suggestion is that `stable' as a name > should be eradicated. Roughly no downside, only closer > adherence to the principle of least astonishment.
Okay, so let me get this straight. You propose to eliminate "stable" as a release. To keep people from hurting themselves. Especially unwitting "auto-updating" ID10Ts. Ok, let me get this straight... How is this a good thing? Anyone that is an Admin worth the salt they have in their body, will not have ANYTHING auto-updating, but "auto-staging". My definition of "Auto-Staging" means: 1. Check for "updates" 2. Update for "updates" 3. Download all of those updated packages 4. Checksum verify those packages, just downloaded re-get the ones not verified properly 5. Send off an e-mail to me every hour or two telling me I need to pay some attention to it. 6. goto #5 every one or two hours 7. goto #1 every six or twelve hours I then login to said machine and "do the right thing" I've done this for years with HP-UX, AIX, OSF/Tru64/WTFitis when each company finally put patches and stuff in a internet reachable repository. I really haven't done Solaris, so I dunno about it, but I suspect it could be done similarly. Now as far as Windows... blahahaha. Yeah whatever. -- greg, [EMAIL PROTECTED] The technology that is Stronger, better, faster: Linux
signature.asc
Description: This is a digitally signed message part