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Re: Which Linux after CyGwin?
- From: Brian Dessent <brian at dessent dot net>
- To: cygwin-talk at cygwin dot com
- Cc: cygwin at cygwin dot com
- Date: Tue, 05 Oct 2004 09:24:19 -0700
- Subject: Re: Which Linux after CyGwin?
- Organization: My own little world...
- References: <F67AB1DD14544242BE5BFE94F5939175018D7818@E2KMEMMCS1.ftbco.ftn.com>
- Reply-to: cygwin at cygwin dot com
(Take this to cygwin-talk please.)
"DePriest, Jason R." wrote:
> If you do use
> Debian, please don't use the 'stable' release. It is very ancient (but
> stable!). Use the 'testing' release. For the most part, you won't have
> any problems and if you do have a problem, expect it to be fixed
> quickly.
That's a very slippery slope and disagrees sharply from the official
Debian line. You are strongly urged to NOT use "testing" in a
production environment. Why? Because criticial security bug fixes are
only guaranteed for "stable". They occur for testing and unstable of
course, but at a relaxed pace. I think that you do a disservice by
automatically stating that one should ignore "stable". At the very
least point them to <http://www.debian.org/releases/> so that they can
decide for themselves.
It is entirely possible to run the stable branch without ancient
versions of everything: <http://backports.org/>
Brian
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