On Thu, Aug 26, 2010 at 10:03:40AM +0200, Petter Reinholdtsen wrote:

> [Christian PERRIER]
> > After a (short) discussion in -devel, I came up with the proposal of
> > activating "testing-proposed-updates" when users install testing, in
> > a similar way that we currently propose activating volatile when
> > they install stable.

> One challenge that should be considered, is what should happen when
> testing become stable, and the meaning of testing-proposed-updates
> changes.

> For example now, testing-proposed-updates is packages intended for
> squeeze, and after the release, it will no longer have packages
> intended for squeeze.

> Should those installing testing today keep using testing, or should
> they get squeeze?  If they should get squeeze, the
> testing-proposed-update source will give them the wrong set of
> packages after squeeze is released.

There is a 'squeeze-proposed-updates' alias for 'testing-proposed-updates',
which will continue to work after release (when it becomes
'stable-proposed-updates' instead).  So whatever method is used for
configuring sources.list currently (and I think it's always right to use the
codename here rather than the suite name, to avoid accidental dist-upgrades
down the line) should apply equally well to testing-proposed-updates in that
sense.

-- 
Steve Langasek                   Give me a lever long enough and a Free OS
Debian Developer                   to set it on, and I can move the world.
Ubuntu Developer                                    http://www.debian.org/
slanga...@ubuntu.com                                     vor...@debian.org



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