Debian 3.0r6 Released 297
Polkan Garcia writes "The Debian group has released an update to the 'Woody' distribution of the popular GNU/Linux OS. From the site: 'This is the sixth and final update of Debian GNU/Linux 3.0 (codename 'woody') which mainly adds security updates to the stable release, along with a few corrections to serious problems. Those who frequently update from security.debian.org won't have to update many packages and most updates from security.debian.org are included in this update.' More good news: r6 is the final update of woody, the new stable release is coming."
This begs the question... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:This begs the question... (Score:5, Funny)
On another note, I get the Debian bit and I know what linux is, but what's this GNU prefix ?
Re:This begs the question... (Score:2)
Basically, Linus is the person who wrote the Linux "kernel", the core of the operating system. The GNU software people wrote a lot of the programs that most people use with linux. Thus many pendantic people like to call it "GNU/Linux".
Re:This begs the question... (Score:3, Funny)
I propose <HUMOR> and </HUMOR> for mild stuff and <JOKE> ... </JOKE> for anything with a punchline requiring some thought, to protect the sense-of-humor-impaired browsers could by default simply not display any text between these tags. AOL browsers could be coded in such a way that there would be no possibility at all to display the text, this to protect the writer from barrages of
Re:This begs the question... (Score:2)
Re:This begs the question... (Score:2)
The joke's gone now, but it was supposed to be: <humour>What is "HUMOR"?</humour>
Re:This begs the question... (Score:2)
Not "pedantic", rather, "obsessed ideologues". I might take their arguments more seriously if they didn't keep changing the name we're supposed use.
http://www.usermode.org/docs/gnulinux.html [usermode.org]
Re:This begs the question... (Score:2)
Re:This begs the question... (Score:4, Funny)
Re:This begs the question... (Score:3, Funny)
Yep, I spend a lot of time... (Score:2, Funny)
Yep, I spend a lot of time hardening my woody...
Re:Yep, I spend a lot of time... (Score:3, Funny)
Of course, you're missing the crucial penetration testing.
Re:This begs the question... (Score:2)
Ahem... (Score:4, Insightful)
let he who has donated at least one line of code, cast the first stone...
Re:Ahem... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Ahem... (Score:2)
Re:Ahem... (Score:2)
Re:Ahem... (Score:2)
If folks want to complain about debian, they should either contribute, or pay someone for support and compain to them. (eg, get one of the commercial debian based distros)
Re:Ahem... (Score:3, Interesting)
I am a fan of Debian, using it on all my home machines and the servers here at work. However, I'm in a somewhat foul mood this morning after spending ages trying to get an HBA FC card to work with debian Sarge, only to (eventually) find they've ripped the code out of the kernel because it contained non-free binary firmware.
Yes,
Re:Ahem... (Score:2)
This is a freedom versus convenience choice. You picked freedom (by running debian) and you seem to be compaining that it is inconvenient. If convenience is more important than freedom for you then you picked the wrong OS. If not, then you have to take some pain of the inconvenience.
Re:Ahem... (Score:2)
Debian for doing it, although it would perhaps be nice to have a non-free version of the kernel for people like me who want it all
Re:Ahem... (Score:2)
However, this does not imply your contribution is worth accepting (much like applying for a job is no guarantee you'll get it).
Re:Ahem... (Score:3, Interesting)
If a distro is really terrible and I want nothing to do with it, I feel perfectly free to criticize it without the slightest intention of fixing anything.
For example, I'm not going to stop criticizing Gentoo because I have specific and accurate complaints. I'm not going to help fix Gentoo because that would involve using it.
I'd rather use something else and leave Gentoo to sink or swim. Hoepfully, my criticism will let the maintainers know their focus isn't working for some things, or at le
Re:Ahem... (Score:2)
If someone is releasing software publicly they either
1) Did it for their own use/amusement, do not care if others use it so they can ignore criticise
2) Did it because they want it to be used, so they need to listen to criticism.
The second is obviously true of commercially developed free so
Re:Ahem... (Score:2)
Re:Ahem... (Score:2)
Debian is moving so slow, future versions will be derived from Ubuntu. It'll become its own grandpa.
Re:Ahem... (Score:2)
Re:Ahem... (Score:2)
After shifting jobs I ended up moving to Ubuntu at work and home. That would -- rather, will change at home as soon as I get a fast connection.
Using both chagrins me immensely, but for different reasons. They are the best of a marginally less-frustrating lot
Cheers
t30
Re:Ahem... (Score:2)
We tried Debian... (Score:2, Funny)
Once he'd got the employees up and running with Debian we let them try it out. It all seemed fine to start
We tried trolling... (Score:3, Funny)
Once he'd got the employees up and running with Slashdot trolling we let them try it out. It all seem
Re:Only a moron... (Score:2)
I only have a modem here and the closest I can get to a system that has some packages on it without sitting here waiting for three weeks to download is by running Knoppix, which is based on Debian.
My servers (all 19 of them) run RHE...
Re:Only a moron... (Score:2)
Re:Only a moron... (Score:2)
And a stage 1 install won't give you a noticeably faster system. It's generally considered a waste of time. Unless your on x86 and you wanted gcc 3.4.3 and nptl, a stage 3 should be fine.
I recently did a stage 3, then changed some settings so it would install gcc 3.4.3 and nptl and it took a few days to get the system running, but it runs pret
Re:Stop being a freaking troll (Score:2)
if you don't like them, you can always change your threshold to +3 or above... but that would be too easy, wouldn't it?
Re:Stop being a freaking troll (Score:2)
Re:We tried Debian... (Score:2)
even if this wasn't a troll (which it is), I wouldn't be as much concerned with the guy being fired as the guy being sentenced to death because OpenOffice crashed...
here's some help (Score:2)
MOD THESE TWITS DOWN (Score:2)
Still, it's a pretty clever karma hack to re-post an insightful comeback to the re-post of a troll.
Re:MOD THESE TWITS DOWN (Score:2)
An unexploited hack is still a hack.
Re:We tried Debian... (Score:2)
Seriously, though. Any insight on why the heck he keeps doing this?
I think it is a good idea not to update quickly (Score:4, Insightful)
For servers and corporate desktops, an update every three years is a frequent update. I am glad that Debian has been current with security updates on this three-year-old release; I would rather have that than the updgrade treadmill Fedora has me on. (The Fedora Legacy [fedoralegacy.org] project seems to be comatose) In fact, I'm going off of the treadmill--my next Linux will be CentOS [centos.org] (a no-cost generic clone of Red Hat Enterprise Linux) which will allow me to have sane updates--once a year or two instead of once every six months.
Re:I think it is a good idea not to update quickly (Score:5, Informative)
An additional point about the XP comparison: nobody shipped software requiring Windows XP in 1999, but that's exactly what happens with Debian. When the Linux version of Neverwinter Nights shipped in 2003, I couldn't install it on Woody, (and still can't, AFAIK) because of Woody's ancient version of gcc. I need Sarge to run that on a stable version of Debian. Here we are, two years later, and still it won't run on Debian stable. It will run on nearly any other distro's latest stable release (and on BSD), but not Debian stable.
The Debian release cycle just keeps getting worse, and I see no end in sight for that. An update every three years might well be fine if the updates weren't falling further behind with each one.
Re:I think it is a good idea not to update quickly (Score:3, Informative)
The Debian release cycle just keeps getting worse, and I see no end in sight for that.
I think you haven't been paying attention. The Debian project has planned many changes to the process after Sarge is released, perhaps the largest is that they're going to reduce the number of supported platforms.
It's possible that the changes won't speed up releases, but there's good reason to think they will. If you disagree, fine, but you should explain why you disagree.
Re:I think it is a good idea not to update quickly (Score:2)
Re:I think it is a good idea not to update quickly (Score:2)
Re:I think it is a good idea not to update quickly (Score:5, Insightful)
Why the heck should Debian compromise on its definition of 'stable' for people who want to play neverwinter nights? Especially as, like you say, you can just run sarge anyway?
A big thankyou to all the Debian maintainers. May all your beers be cold.
Re:I think it is a good idea not to update quickly (Score:3, Funny)
Hey, some of the Debian maintainers are British, you know. "May all your beers be cold or, if drinking real ale, at slightly below room temperature."
Re:I think it is a good idea not to update quickly (Score:2)
I'm sorry, but knocking an extremely reliable and stable OS that is not known for its bleeding-edge packages vs known stable ones, and an OS that is more meant to be a server vs a game console, I don't even consider your troubles with the Neverwinter Nights game informative or even any kind of a datapoint besides Debian is not meant to run games (
Re:I think it is a good idea not to update quickly (Score:2)
I have many Woody systems around and getting the latest greatest software packages running on them can be a real pain... especially desktop stuff.
Although any desktops I build these days are sarge. If someone hasn't gone through the
Re:I think it is a good idea not to update quickly (Score:2)
ie if you write an app using only stuff that was in gtk 2.2 but compile it using gtk 2.4 headers the result will NOT run on gtk 2.2
standard linux library development practices assume you will update your libraries but they assume you won't take a binary built on your system to a system with older libraries.
Re:I think it is a good idea not to update quickly (Score:2)
Windows XP is at service pack 2, which is a whole new dot release, adding lots of new features.
Windows 2003 is the successor of Windows 2000. AFAIK both have service packs, aka dot releases.
The Best Distro... hands down (Score:2)
Re:The Best Distro... hands down (Score:2)
They would not even provide decent academic pricing for official versions. WTF? I don't want to pay every year for support.
Debian works, works well, and is free. Knoppix is painless for install, and apt-get is great.
Some utils are not as friendly as they could be, but things are ok.
You recycle the hardware (Score:2)
Re:The Best Distro... hands down (Score:2)
On my case, the hardware use to fail or the programs and documetns grow to a size that it can't fit the HD anymore, and since the hole computer is worth less than a new HD, I upgrade.
But that is stuff that happened until last upgrade cicle. Nowadays, it makes more sense to upgrade the computer piece by piece and keep the system as a hole running. So, for now on, expect to see Debian lasting much longer than it used to.
Well, it will also will last longer because of the longer release cicle, but I don't th
Re:The Best Distro... hands down (Score:2, Funny)
Grammar retarded. (Score:2)
The retarded poster's grammar is retarded. It should have been :
You're retarded.
Forgot a word (Score:4, Funny)
His retarded Debian? His retarded red hat? His retarded devil?
Speak up.
Re:apt-get (Score:5, Informative)
I thought that apt-get had was unable to handle multiple architectures on a single system, which prevented a fully integrated 64 & 32 bit version of Debian. Has that problem with apt-get been solved yet?
Yes and no. The "biarch" system has been working for several years to support both 32 and 64 bit Sparc software. That same technology could be used now to support mixed 32/64-bit code for AMD64 processors, but Debian developers have opted not to do that. Instead, the new multiarch system will support an arbitrary number of architectures, very flexibly. That will not only address the AMD64 issue but it will also make handling of other x86 subarchitectures easier.
Currently, there are some Debian packages that come in multiple flavors because they benefit significantly from processor-specific optimizations. The kernel, for example, comes compiled for 386, 586, 686, K6, K7, amd64-generic, amd64-k8 and em64t, plus SMP versions of most of those. Mplayer also comes in multiple versions, though not as many. This is handled by having a big list of kernel-image and mplayer packages. With multiarch, you'll be able to specify that you have, say, an AMD64 processor, and then apt-get will understand which subarchitectures will and will not run on your system, and which subarchitectures are preferred. Then you can just pick generic packages and the system will install the best version. It will also handle situations like mozilla and flashplayer. If you install mozilla on an AMD64 box, you should probably get a 64-bit version for best performance. However, if you want flash to work, you have to install the Macromedia plugin and it's 32-bit, so you have to install a 32-bit version of mozilla so that it can use the 32-bit plugin. The new multiarch system will handle all of those dependencies for you.
So apt-get is perfectly capable of handling a mixed 32 and 64-bit system now, but only if the package maintainers set things up carefully (which is what most other distros must do). Debian has opted to forego such a "manual" solution and instead wait until the elegant and flexible general solution is done.
Re:Not hands down. (Score:2)
As for Debian's lack of stable released being a good thing, I disagree, and so do many many former Debian users. The few of you remaining Deb'ers always tout about that, but the numbers say otherwise.
And you argue that now it's just a core server distro, but that's not how it started. It may be that way now because you could never reasonably use it as a workstation machine, that is true yes. There used be tons of people using De
Question (Maybe slightly OT).... (Score:2)
Re:Question (Maybe slightly OT).... (Score:4, Informative)
Found this link from the Project Leader's page [debian.org]
Mod parent up, informative. (Score:2)
autopackage (Score:2)
Re:autopackage (Score:2)
As far as I know, autopackage supports Debian, so an autopackage package will work. There is no reason for Debian to use it as their primary packaging system, they already have apt and it works fine*. You are right when said that autopackage have its quirks. Not being good for a distro management is one of them. The system is designed to make single programs install easily on multiple distros, not to base a hole distro on it.
* Try apt before complainning... Really, try it!
Great news (Score:2)
Let's don't get ahead of ourselves (Score:4, Funny)
That sounds good, but I hope that they're not just succumbing to deadline pressure and shoving this thing out the door half baked.
Re:Let's don't get ahead of ourselves (Score:2)
this one also rolled in a certain update that will prevent a possible major problem for those who try and upgrade from woody-sarge without following the instructions.
Re:Let's don't get ahead of ourselves (Score:2)
If you're a very good boy/girl/thing, the mod point fairies come and sprinkle mod points over you.
Of course, like all such fairies (tooth fairy, electric drill chuck key fairy, etc), they need some compensation. Best not to attract their attention unless you have body parts you can stand to lose.
Debian support for modern CPUs (Score:2)
I saw this article and thought I'd look into Debian again, just to see what it's like. I figured since I've always liked apt just a tad better than portage, and I'm now switching to a new architecture (AMD64), the Debian packages for that architecture would be optimized for m
Re:Debian support for modern CPUs (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Debian support for modern CPUs (Score:2)
Re:Debian support for modern CPUs (Score:2)
Stop whining about stable being old (Score:2)
I've been running on debian unstable for about the last 7 or 8 months - at home and at work. It is exceptionally solid.
Debian unstable for me has been more stable than either Fedora (both 2 and 3), and Mandrake. Dunno about other distros.
Debian packages break a lot less frequently than packages for most other distributions I've played with (slak, RH, Mandrake). Also, the scope of debian's package system is unmatched.
I was amazed when I was trying to install 'bioperl' at work (a somewhat esoteric perl
Re:Stop whining about stable being old (Score:2)
I think you're confused about the meaning of the word "Debian unstable". The unstable distribution is called so because it is changing, it is work a progress. In this sense Debian unstable is indeed unstable and Fedora Core is stable. Only bug fixes and security updates are making into Fedora while with Debian unstable new versions of packages are making into distribution all the time. Maybe that's fine for a devel
Re:Stop whining about stable being old (Score:2)
I use an 'unstable' build of debian, and it's the most stable OS I've used, yet for an approaching user facing, a copy of an up-to-date-but-'unstable' debian, a two-year-old-but-'stable' debian or Fedora Core, guess which one's going to get picked. Naming is everything and the debian brand is being hurt by it's semantics.
dh-make-perl is your friend. (Score:2)
I was amazed when I was trying to install 'bioperl' at work (a somewhat esoteric perl library for handling biology data). I was just joking around and typed 'apt-get install bioperl', thinking to myself "if only life could be that nice". I couldn't beleive my eyes when I realized that bioperl was actually in the package repos. It blew me away.
And even if a particular Perl module isn't included, you can build a nice Debian package of it from source or right off CPAN with this handy Debian Helper script:
d
Whow an internal dupe(!) (Score:2)
1. From the site: 'This is the sixth and final update of Debian GNU/Linux 3.0 (codename 'woody') [..]
And this:
2. [..] More good news: r6 is the final update of woody [..]
3. ???
4. Profit!
Stable vs. Testing, Woody vs. Sarge (Score:2)
When 3.1 comes out next week or whenever, will Woody go away or will the existing package list that is Sarge just start to be called Woody? Or will they start calling Stable Sarge, testing Sid and unstable something else?
I'm installing linux on a new server and want to try out Debian. I installed Ubuntu last night which seems fine, except it doesn't seem to include some software I need
Re:Stable vs. Testing, Woody vs. Sarge (Score:2)
testing is the current testing distribution currently pointed at (symlinked to on the servers) sarge
stable is the current stable distribution currently pointed at woody
oldstable is the previous stable distribition currently pointed at potato
when sarge releases testing will be pointed at the new testing distribution (etch) stable will be pointed at sarge and oldstable will be pointed at woody
Re:Stable vs. Testing, Woody vs. Sarge (Score:2)
What's next? (Score:2)
For the sexy salesman in you, it's Oxy Toe Sin, because you want them to do your bidding.
It will be sold in little displays by plaid jackets everywhere. Or next to Rufees.
Re:Heh. (Score:2, Insightful)
What the hell do you mean, finally? The last update to Woody was April 16th of this year.
Unless you know what you're talking about, please don't try to troll. It just makes you look bad.
Re:woody (Score:2)
Re:woody (Score:2)
"Windows ME"
Re:woody (Score:2)
Haven't unzipped your pants lately, eh?
Sarge Installer (Score:2)
You don't have to wait for that, however...
http://www.debian.org/devel/debian-installer/ [debian.org]
Re:woody (Score:2)
Re:unlike me (Score:2)
I hate to come across as a troll, but really, both comments have absolutely no purpose except to maybe spur flamewars.
Re:SPARC port? (Score:2)
Re:You don't make sense to me (Score:2)
SPARC v7, for example, lacks an integer multiply instruction, meaning it needs to be implemented in hardware. This is painfully slow, and Debian compiling for that target means their ssh implementation takes seven or eight times longer than it would if wer
Re:You don't make sense to me (Score:2)
Re:About time! (Score:2)
I literally just started downloaded the 2nd iso for 3.0r5 from the USC mirror. I took a second to admire my 580 kB/s download speed, then thought, "Hey, I'm gonna go see if there's anything interesting on Slashdot." Creepy...
Re:Is it just me ... (Score:2)
Re:Is it just me ... (Score:2)
you only need the full collection of CDs if you wan't debians full software collection availible without a net link.
Re:Is it just me ... (Score:3, Informative)
The first CD has almost everything you need to setup a basic desktop, including Gnome, KDE and OpenOffice.
The packages on the CDs are organizated by their popularity, meaning that on the first CDs are the most installed packages. They gather this information from actual real-world systems, and you can contribute too, just install the "popularity-contest" package, and the information about the packages you install will be sent automaticaly to the Debian guys.
The CDs are only needed if y
Re:Is it just me ... (Score:2)
Re:pointless statement... (Score:2)
however the reason this point release was made now is because the infrastructure won't allow for a woody point release once sarge is stable which fingers crossed should be happening this weekend!
Re:pointless statement... (Score:2)
There is still AIM, Yahoo, Jabber, ICQ, etc... I wouldn't call it useless yet.