Hi, Looking at point release dates and how p-u(-new) works might give you some enlightenment?
https://wiki.debian.org/DebianBullseye#Release_and_updates https://wiki.debian.org/StableProposedUpdates Best regards, Martin Von meinem iPhone gesendet > Am 29.06.2023 um 19:02 schrieb Gernot Hillier <[email protected]>: > > Hi there! > > Perhaps I have a major misunderstanding here, but while frequently > downloading packages based on "first seen" timestamp successfully, I found > two issues with seemingly outdated indices end of 2022: > > ncurses 6.2+20201114-2+deb11u1: > > https://snapshot.debian.org/package/ncurses/6.2%2B20201114-2%2Bdeb11u1/ > claims the package was "first seen on 2023-02-24 09:03:43". And I can also > see it in > https://snapshot.debian.org/archive/debian/20230224T090343Z/pool/main/n/ncurses/. > > However, > https://snapshot.debian.org/archive/debian/20230224T090343Z/dists/bullseye/main/source/ > seems to point to Sources.xz from 2022-12-17 which doesn't include the > package I want. > > > nftables 0.9.8-3.1+deb11u1: > > According to > https://snapshot.debian.org/package/nftables/0.9.8-3.1%2Bdeb11u1/, it is > available in 20221209T210537Z. > > But > https://snapshot.debian.org/archive/debian/20221209T210537Z/dists/bullseye/main/source/ > references Sources.xz from 2022-09-10. I need to jump to 20221217T151645Z to > get a recent Sources.xz. > > > Were there some issues with stuck snapshots back in 2022 or is it me > misunderstanding how this is supposed to work? > > Thanks in advance! > > -- > Gernot Hillier > Siemens AG, Linux Expert Center > > > > > > >
