Am Donnerstag, 25. Mai 2023, 10:36:18 CEST schrieb Brad Rogers:
Hi Brad (and all the others),
this is what I missed. The table makes it fully understandable (did not know,
that it exists), I always thought "freeze" means "Now do not touch all
packages any more, except for bg problems" - and
On Thu, 25 May 2023 10:06:16 +0200
Hans wrote:
Hello Hans,
>What did I not understand? For me "freeze" means "stay at actual status
>and do only necessary changes for security or breaking reasons".
It's that. Only "essential"(1) updates are permitted. If you think
there are a large number of
On Thu, May 25, 2023 at 10:06:16AM +0200, Hans wrote:
> Hi folks,
>
> just a little thing, I am somehow confused about.
>
> I read that debian/testing is now in state "freeze" as the next release is
> shortly to come.
>
> As I running "bookworm" now, I am wondering, that debian/testing (aka
>
Am 25.05.2023 um 10:06 schrieb Hans:
> Hi folks,
>
> just a little thing, I am somehow confused about.
>
> I read that debian/testing is now in state "freeze" as the next release is
> shortly to come.
>
> As I running "bookworm" now, I am wondering, that debian/testing (aka
> bookworm), still
Le 25/05/2023 à 10:06, Hans a écrit :
Hi folks,
just a little thing, I am somehow confused about.
I read that debian/testing is now in state "freeze" as the next release is
shortly to come.
As I running "bookworm" now, I am wondering, that debian/testing (aka
bookworm), still gets a lot of cha
Hi folks,
just a little thing, I am somehow confused about.
I read that debian/testing is now in state "freeze" as the next release is
shortly to come.
As I running "bookworm" now, I am wondering, that debian/testing (aka
bookworm), still gets a lot of changed packages last days.
Obviously
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