Debian always uses somewhat "old" versions, they just take whatever is 
stable as soon as feature-freeze date comes. So even for a "recent" release 
(like Debian 11 Bullseye) you can expect their version to be at least half 
if not a year behind.
What they do though is backport security fixes to those versions should 
they come up, but they will never ever upgrade to a more recent release 
until the next version of the distro.

[email protected] schrieb am Sonntag, 8. August 2021 um 23:26:14 UTC+2:

> For those interested: just found ansible-core 2.11 for ubuntu (and also 
> debian).
>
> https://launchpad.net/~ansible/+archive/ubuntu/ansible-4
> http://ppa.launchpad.net/ansible/ansible-4/ubuntu/pool/main/a/ansible-core/
>
> it seems to be the same signing key with the "old" (pre 2.11) ansible 
> repository; tomorrow is testing day :-P
>
> but all this is wrong, very wrong, I should find this information with a 
> simple search, not digging for hours reading articles and documentation and 
> discovering it by chance ...
>
> Alex
>
>

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