On Fri, Feb 15, 2013 at 12:58:45AM +0100, Michael wrote:
> > Is anyone running wheezy today?
> 
> Yes. I don't see crashes or critical bugs with major applications, but i 
> avoid KDE on 'production' desktops :) but then, 'production ready' is a 
> slightly broad term :) 
> 
> From my i386 laptop, it seems to be ok though (with plasma desktop) if you 
> don't insist on 3D GL eye candy.
> 
> Give it a try. You should be able to downgrade anytime, just change 
> sources.list again. 

Downgrading is not easy.  It will not automatically downgrade packages 
that are more recent than specified in sources.list.

Downgrading is easy only if you have a *complete* copy of your old 
system elsewhere so you wipe out the neew one and restore the old.

And watch out for things like /var/spool/mail, which contains your mail 
and which you prbably don't want to downgrade.

-- hendrik

> 
> > have to do with nvidia.
> 
> If generic ones (like the nvidia driver from xorg package) don't suffice for 
> you, you may install nvidia-kernel-source and module-assistant, and do
> (root:)  m-a clean nvidia; m-a a-i nvidia
> You still need to install nvidia-glx, nvidia-support, and dependent stuff; 
> and to ditch the generic driver, you probably need to put 'nvidia' into a 
> rudimentary xorg.conf file as provided by packages nvidia-xconfig.
> 
> For failsafe, you should know how to run a root terminal, and better use 
> text-console (the thing you end up with when you deinstall any loginmanager 
> or use Ctrl+Alt+'Entf' (on a German keyboard) from X.) For example if nvidia 
> does not work as expected, use aptitude from textconsole then you should be 
> able to fix anything, without X session.
> 

I recommend put 'testing' into sources.list, instead of 'wheezy'; this will 
keep you up-to-date even if 'wheezy' gets stale some day.
You probably mean 'wheezy becomes  stable, not stale.

> 
> If your machine is rather modern, you can have both testing and unstable in 
> sources, because they are rather 'close' compared to the large gap between 
> testing and stable. Then you can downgrade specific packages to 'testing' 
> when they seem to be buggy, and keep others (if possible) 'unstable'. For 
> what it's worth.
> You can try that with testing / stable too, of course, though it should be 
> harder to balance.

With such a combination, you will usually just get the packages from 
the newer release and you might as well not mention the older one, 
except perhaps for packages that have been dropped from the new release 
and don't have newer versions.

-- hendrik


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