Hi,

This is not meant as blame but I sincerely would like to understand the 
mechanisms/approach and apparent complexities behind it: I was wondering if 
anyone could shed some light on Debian's strategy of releasing systemd packages?

Commendably, the systemd project maintains a dedicated repository 
(systemd-stable) for stable branches with backported patches available to all 
distros, but apparently the Debian project is not leveraging this to its 
advantage:

Current version in Debian stable:
247.3-7+deb11u1 (March 2022)
Latest version of this major release in systemd-stable:
247.13 (Dec 2022, 10 minor versions ahead)

Current version in Debian backports:
251.3-1~bpo11+1 (Aug 2022)
Latest version of this major release in systemd-stable:
251.10 (Dec 2022, 7 minor versions ahead)


What is the reason for this gap? I understand package maintaining is a 
challenging task, especially for something complex like systemd. But would the 
systemd-stable repo not provide already a lot of groundwork (as in: backporting 
bugfixes) for this, to reduce the effort?

Thanks for insights, regards,
tok

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