On 03/17/2011 10:49 AM, Benjamin Wolsey wrote:
Debian stable is now Squeeze, which has boost 1.42. Our current maximum
boost version, which by policy up to now is the version available to
Debian stable, is currently 1.34.1. That version unfortunately lacks
boost ASIO (a really excellent
2011/3/18 Rob Savoye r...@welcomehome.org
On 03/17/2011 10:49 AM, Benjamin Wolsey wrote:
Debian stable is now Squeeze, which has boost 1.42. Our current maximum
boost version, which by policy up to now is the version available to
Debian stable, is currently 1.34.1. That version
Debian stable is now Squeeze, which has boost 1.42. Our current maximum
boost version, which by policy up to now is the version available to
Debian stable, is currently 1.34.1. That version unfortunately lacks
boost ASIO (a really excellent header-only library for asynchronous IO),
some useful
On Thu, Mar 17, 2011 at 05:49:00PM +0100, Benjamin Wolsey wrote:
Debian stable is now Squeeze, which has boost 1.42. Our current maximum
boost version, which by policy up to now is the version available to
Debian stable, is currently 1.34.1. That version unfortunately lacks
boost ASIO (a
Are you sure it's 1.42 on squeeze ?
http://packages.debian.org/squeeze/libboost-dev
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On Thu, Mar 17, 2011 at 06:03:31PM +0100, Benjamin Wolsey wrote:
Are you sure it's 1.42 on squeeze ?
http://packages.debian.org/squeeze/libboost-dev
Ok. Also OpenBSD has 1.42.
Well, then it looks like this time Ubuntu LTS beats debian stable
in terms of lateness
If, as you said, 1.35
On Thu, 17 Mar 2011, Benjamin Wolsey wrote:
Debian stable is now Squeeze, which has boost 1.42. Our current maximum
boost version, which by policy up to now is the version available to
Debian stable, is currently 1.34.1.
Should we bump the minimum version, and if so, to what?
The only
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