On Fri, Jan 04, 2008 at 09:17:32AM +0100, Arnau Rebassa i Villalonga wrote: > I've been searching some info about the different Debian's branches > and the policy followed to move one package from SID->testing->stable > but I haven't found this info. I guess it's explained somewhere in the > Debian's site but I couldn't found it, any hint? ;) >
It probably is documented somewhere on the website, but for reference, it is in the debian-reference chapter 2.1 section 3, 4, and 5. To answer your question, Sid is the unstable section. This is where active development goes on (or is that Experimental?). There are some criteria before packages in Sid move to Testing but it is automatic. One is that the package hasn't changed in 10 days. I think that there is a limit also on the number of release-critical bugs. At some point when a new release is planned, when Testing starts to settle down, it gets Frozen and only release-critical bugs get fixed. At a later point, a Release Candidate is created (RC1), then after a few more bugs are found and fixed, an RC2 is created. Once the release-critical count gets very very small, the Stable version becomes Old-Stable and Testing (Frozen) becomes Stable. This is all under the controll of the Release Manger. If you still can't find it, I'll see what I can find on the web site the next time I have the internet turned on (I'm on dialup). Doug. -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]