Debian Etch to be Released in December 78
lord_rob the only on writes "According to a ZDNet article, the next release of Debian should be available in December 2006. From the article : 'The date represents a dramatic improvement in the regularity of Debian's development cycle. Etch will be shipped only 18 months after the previous release, version 3.1.'
I'll believe it (Score:2, Funny)
Re:I'll believe it (Score:2)
I knew this was coming... (Score:3, Funny)
I know the name of it (Score:3, Funny)
Re:I know the name of it (Score:3, Funny)
No, it will be Debian 3.11 for Workgroups.
Debian 95 will come later...
Re:Is the world ending?? (Score:1)
Re:Is the world ending?? (Score:1)
Re:Is the world ending?? (Score:1)
Linux maybe, but not Debian. The whole "does not change often" thing may work for some kinds of servers, but on the desktop it's a nightmare. Oh, you want to install the security-critical bug-fix update to your web browser? I'm sorry, that requires a recent version of the widget toolkit it uses, which in turn requires recent versions of three-quarters of the stuff on your system, none of which is available for any distro more than about six
Yes! (Score:2)
Re:AMD64? (Score:3, Informative)
One of the major new features of Etch will be official support for the 64-bit x86 architecture which is becoming increasingly used in servers.
Damnit! (Score:4, Funny)
Change every occurence of stable into sarge (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Damnit! (Score:2)
Who says you have to upgrade instantly? I know a bunch of people running FC1, or even RH9 or 7.3. If it works, you don't have to touch it - it's not like Gentoo :)
/ducks
Re:Damnit! (Score:3, Informative)
Who says you have to upgrade instantly? I know a bunch of people running FC1, or even RH9 or 7.3. If it works, you don't have to touch it
It's not a good idea to run systems, especially if they're Internet-facing, on old releases that don't get security updates.
That said, Sarge will continue getting security updates until the successor to Etch is released, so there's no problem with continuing to run it for a couple of years yet, even if Debian manages to keep up the 18-month cycle.
Re:Damnit! (Score:2, Informative)
>> or even RH9 or 7.3. If it works, you don't have to touch it
> It's not a good idea to run systems, especially if they're Internet-facing,
> on old releases that don't get security updates.
The Fedora Legacy Project [fedoralegacy.org] provides security updates for RedHat and Fedora releases that have been end-of-lifed by RedHat. Currently, they support RH 7.3 and 9, and Fedora 1-3.
Re:Damnit! (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Damnit! (Score:1)
an improvement? (Score:4, Insightful)
Debian's QA process takes a long time, but it's nice not to have to go through a dist-upgrade every few months on servers that need to be left alone and 'just work'.
Re:an improvement? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:an improvement? (Score:4, Insightful)
I assume you're referring to Ubuntu. Ubuntu does NOT require you to dist-upgrade, it is your choice. You WILL be supported on Hoary and Dapper with security releases for years. It is entirely unneccessary to upgrade every couple of months for a server. Find something, and stick with it.
Re:an improvement? (Score:2, Informative)
Re:an improvement? (Score:1)
Re:an improvement? (Score:2)
If by "a few months", you mean 2x18 = 36 months, then yes. You should test on a test system once it is out though. If it works and is stable (hey, you can run it for a couple months at least to check it out) you can dist-upgrade and get another 18 months. If it breaks, well you got at least a year to either a) report bugs b) fix your own setup o
Re:an improvement? (Score:2)
Well, I know that I am. Sarge is almost useless on desktops nowadays*, and Etch has a lot of nice tools for servers. The upgrade will be very welcome.
Now, don't take the above points (mainly the first one) as a critic. Debian is awesome.
* How do Windows users deal with a 5 years upgrade cycle? Worse yet, how do Windows users deal with a 5 years upgrade cycle that won't even add any usefull feature when complete?
Wait a second (Score:3, Funny)
Debian goes way to fast for me! Argh! I can't keep up!
Re:Wait a second (Score:1)
Re:Wait a second (Score:2)
Re:Wait a second (Score:2)
Re:Wait a second (Score:2)
It's a mighty, mighty Pentium 75, with a whoppin' 64M of memory.
Maybe it's time to retire that box. It's just that when I want to get to it stuck out in the back of the garage, I have to cut through so many spider webs that it's a full day project.
This is a bad idea (Score:2)
Thus, no matter how bug-free the software is, it will still be losing some "stability" if people are forced to upgrade on an 18-month cycle. I understand that there's some pressure to compete with fedora and
woody still supported (Score:2)
Re:This is a bad idea (Score:4, Informative)
Re:This is a bad idea (Score:1)
Well, this release is really sooner than I was waiting for, but I think that it's not like it will hit the stability of most common desktop users. Any way, most of the Debian desktop user that I know, don't want to be updated, so they use Debian Testing sources.
On the other hand, server applications, I'd like to suppose, and hope, that Debian staff will keep some of the stable versions of many server applications and libraries, or at least the latest tested ones.
Debian Etch (Score:1, Funny)
There was a comment on the article with Vista falling behind few days ago where someone said even Etch would be release before Vista... guess he was right!
Re:Debian Etch (Score:2)
Not just Etch, but Debian's even beaten Microsoft by releasing Woody and Sarge in the time WinXP was supposed to go to Longh^H^H^HVista.
"Debian: faster development, more secure, more features, and more stable than MS"
lol
Let me be the first to say... (Score:3, Interesting)
I'm not suggesting Debian shouldn't have long releases schedules (it ensures a rock-solid product), but only that they consider what it is doing to the userbase.
Re:Let me be the first to say... (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Let me be the first to say... (Score:2)
Re:Let me be the first to say... (Score:3, Funny)
This sub-distribution could be essentially Debian but with an emphasis on the latest and greatest desktop environment, newest kernel, etc. But all of the tools would remain the same (apt-get, etc.) and packages should be interchangeable. (Barring kernel or library dependencies of course - attempt
Re:Let me be the first to say... (Score:2)
"relatively stable" is like "kind of pregnant", first Ubuntu release I put into production was replaced inside a month with Sarge, because Sarge worked and Ubuntu didn't.
Which is why the article is wrong, Etch will release when it is ready, which means when all the important bugs we know about are fi
Re:Let me be the first to say... (Score:2)
Re:Let me be the first to say... (Score:1)
Run for cover! (Score:2)
Re:Run for cover! (Score:5, Insightful)
Finally a faster Debian release. (Score:2, Insightful)
What a load of bollocks.
I've been working as a server administrator for 8 years now. Debian was quite okay from '98 until about '00. After having newly upgraded from slink to potato I found that the mysql installation was so old that developers wouldn't touch it at all. Upgrading it in a nice way was not exactly an easy thing to do - as just COMPILING a newer version was hell - due to it depending on things that was too ne
Re:Finally a faster Debian release. (Score:2)
Running a server on Debian can be a pain. Say, I have a mail server. Before Sarge was finally released I was stuck with an ancient version of exim without support for exiscan-acl. Sure, I could get it from backports, but that's a pain, and implies trusting an external source. I could also compile it, which is also a pain for reasons you already mentioned.
The thing is that for a mail server, exim is THE thing I want to run, and the rest is pretty much auxiliary.
Well, anyway (Score:1)
Debian vs. Microsoft (Score:3, Insightful)
Congratulations, folks, seriously. I'll be looking forward to that big apt-get!
Re:Debian vs. Microsoft (Score:1)
You mean, aptitude, right?
I just installed 3.1 and to my dismay, apt-get is no where to be found. Yes, yes, aptitude is better, blah blah... but come on, I had been typing 'apt-get' for years!?
#alias apt-get=`aptitude`
Ahh, thats better!
Interesting... (Score:1)
Re:Interesting... (Score:1)
You seem to forget that Ubuntu is based on Debian. This means that Debian does most of the heavy lifting that is required for making each Ubuntu release, so that Ubuntu can concentrate on developing their (GNOME) desktop. Ubuntu supports only a fraction of the amount of packages that Debian does (there's no security updates for Ubuntu's "universe" & "multiverse") and Ubuntu also supports much fewer architectures.
You cannot seriously say that Ubuntu competes with Debian as long as Ubuntu cannot even st
Etch? Where have I been? (Score:4, Interesting)
2.2
Linux version 2.2.19 (root@matrix) (gcc version 2.95.2 20000220 (Debian GNU/Linux)) #11 Wed May 28 23:36:14 EDT 2003
I'm still on Potato. It's been stable and online for the last 6 years (as I recall upgrading to potato from slink). Give me a good reason to upgrade being this is my web/mail/dns/ftp box.
ps: cpu info shows AMD K5 75mhz
Re:Etch? Where have I been? (Score:1)
weird, ps
"ERROR: Process ID list syntax error. ********* simple selection ********* ********* selection by list *********..."
in my box, should I upgrade ps?
Re:Etch? Where have I been? (Score:2)
No one is making you upgrade, but there's no telling how long the backports will be supported. You might want to consider at least woody, so you can extend the life of available security patches.
Once Etch goes stable, you might try Sarge. Just make sure you upgrade your boot loader to grub as you may have some issues with LILO (so I've heard, haven't confirmed). Then you'll keep a fairly updated box for some time to come.
Re:Etch? Where have I been? (Score:2)
Re:Etch? Where have I been? (Score:1)
One thing that springs to mind off the top of my head is that IP Tables (the firewall system in Linux 2.4 and higher) is much nicer to work with than IP Chains (Linux 2.2, IIRC).
Even if you don't update the whole distro, I sure hope you've updated the services that are exposed to the internet from the versions in potato. Especially the mail server. (If you haven't, I'd seriously consider replacing the system altogeth
Re:Not such a good idea ? (Score:1)
To release a distribution 18 months after the previous release is still a long time, but compared to the time it took for Sarge to be released it's extremely fast.
The problem with Debian right now is.:
Re:Not such a good idea ? (Score:1)
There's a big difference between Ubuntu and Debian. Ubuntu is the Debian-based product of a commercial company, Canonical, and their marketing talk for Ubuntu consists of half-truths (=half-lies) and hiding problems from users is part of their their policy. Debian, on the other hand, is a distro made by a non-profit organization developed by volunteers. Debian (unlike Ubuntu) stands on its own feet, it's not based on any other distro and its policy is NOT to hide any problems. Debian supports officially 4-5
Use Testing! (Score:1)