[ale] Question for Debian users
Robert L. Harris
Robert.L.Harris at rdlg.net
Sun Nov 9 21:08:31 EST 2003
I pretty much have to agree. If you want a system that is amazingly
stable and secure get Debian Stable. I run Debian Unstable on all my
home machines. In 2 years I have 2 things break (perl once and a
library the other). Since Debian keeps packages local to disk it's easy
to roll back if you want as well as long as you haven't cleaned up. I
usually clean up about a week after an update.
It's also very secure. Debian does roll out updates very quickly to
Stable for security updates.
Upgrading from Debian 2.2 to Debian 3.0 was simple:
apt-get update
apt-get dist-upgrade
On my other machines I did this:
apt-get update
apt-get -y dist-upgrade
which automatically did all the upgrade except for required questions.
Thus spake David Corbin (dcorbin at machturtle.com):
> On Sunday 09 November 2003 20:02, Greg wrote:
> > I was looking at Debian (as RH and Suse seem to be waning these days and I
> > have a more deep resentment over upgrading as I get older) and I was
> > wondering why Debian users like it over something like Suse or RH ? I was
> > also wondering what y'all do for a version upgrade ? is it simply a "build
> > my pc" command and presto - the new os is done ? Does Debian keep up with
> > the latest kernels and linux apps ? Is it stable ? The homepage info
> > makes it seem to be a pretty impressive system.
> >
> > Also, anyone have any experience with Debian on a Sun sparc64 box ?
> >
>
> What I like best, is that IS stable. It is very well tested, and very uniform
> in it's behavior across packages. Debian has 3 "versions" available at any
> one time "stable", "testing", and "unstable". Stable is just that, and
> consequently it is behind on many version, though Debian does an excellent
> job of providing updates for security bugs, even to the stable system.
> Testing and Unstable are progressively more modern, and more in flux. Even
> unstable works "fairly well" most of the time, but you can run into problems
> from time to time, if you update unstable a lot.
>
> The other thing that is great, is apt - it's easy to keep your system up to
> date, or to install new packages. Upgrades are extremely easy. Two
> commands, and poof, I'm running the new version. I've been through about 3-4
> version upgrades, and it has never been a problem.
>
> > TIA,
> >
> > Greg
> >
> > _______________________________________________
> > Ale mailing list
> > Ale at ale.org
> > http://www.ale.org/mailman/listinfo/ale
>
> --
> David Corbin <dcorbin at machturtle.com>
>
> _______________________________________________
> Ale mailing list
> Ale at ale.org
> http://www.ale.org/mailman/listinfo/ale
:wq!
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Robert L. Harris | GPG Key ID: E344DA3B
@ x-hkp://pgp.mit.edu
DISCLAIMER:
These are MY OPINIONS ALONE. I speak for no-one else.
Life is not a destination, it's a journey.
Microsoft produces 15 car pileups on the highway.
Don't stop traffic to stand and gawk at the tragedy.
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