When woody finally is stable, and you run apt-get upgrade, you should get
suspicious when it says there are 150 packages to be upgraded and its going
to download 250 MB to do it :-)

You will probably know woody is out before hand, and should be expecting it.

Andrew Tait
System Administrator
Country NetLink Pty, Ltd
E-Mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
WWW: http://www.cnl.com.au
30 Bank St Cobram, VIC 3644, Australia
Ph: +61 (03) 58 711 000
Fax: +61 (03) 58 711 874

"It's the smell! If there is such a thing." Agent Smith - The Matrix

----- Original Message -----
From: "David Hart" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Thursday, March 14, 2002 11:09 AM
Subject: Re: [SECURITY] [DSA 122-1] New zlib & other packages fix buffer
overflow


> On Thu, Mar 14, 2002 at 09:29:46AM +1100, Andrew Tait wrote:
>
> > Otherwise the Apt::Default-Release line in apt.conf has no effect.
>
> Thank you, I see.  What happens, though, when woody becomes stable (and
> you're tracking stable).  Does this mean that an 'apt-get upgrade' is
> going to pull in all the woody stuff?  On a 'stable' server I'd like to
> be in control of when a major upgrade takes place.  (I'm rather new to
> Debian so please forgive me if I'm missing something obvious.)
>
> --
> David Hart
> [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
>
> --
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