Debian Maintainer Hints At September Release for Lenny
nerdyH writes "The Debian project's maintainer, Luke Claes, announced in an email Saturday that he will freeze the 'testing' or 'Lenny' tree, in preparation for a new stable release of Debian Linux in ... September! The freeze means that open source software developers have only a couple more days to package any applications that they want to be included in the next release of Debian — and by extension, in the inner sanctum source lists of distributions such as Ubuntu that are based on it. After the freeze starts next week, Debian maintainers will turn their attention to 364 release-critical bugs, and half-a-dozen high-priority goals. Given the work to be done, is September really feasible? Lenny always was a little slow getting back to his right place ..."
only a couple more days to package any applications that they want to be included in the next release of Debian
If you've left packaging until the freeze announcement, you don't deserve to be included.
I run Debian in several capacities -- stable on my work server, and unstable on my personal machine.
A lot of people are going to (quite accurately, I guess) point out that for anybody running unstable/experimental there is not much to this. I mean, release numbers are soooo 1990's, as a simple apt-get update; apt-get upgrade brings you up to the latest packages. Even experimental seems to lag waaaay behind other bleeding edge distros though (gentoo).
Of course, the release is more important for new installs or people running stable. I have been very impressed with Debian stable, the SSH bug nonwithstanding.
As software packages and Linux get more mature, I see the definition of a "release" issue becoming even less important for the non-server / non-corporate user. Continuous upgrades are the way of the future. Even on the M$ side this seems to be true, with their MS office 200x and "automatic upgrades."
Thoughts?
Slashdotter, ID #101. UIDs are in binary, right?
Law and Order fans want to know.
It's about time we had some Law and Order in that rogue Debian distro!
Oh wait...Wrong Lenny.
I use Slackware, the one, true Unix like operating system... Punk!
What?
So next stable Debian version will not have KDE 4.1?
A new release already? That doesn't sound right.
This isn't the Debian I grew up with.
Something's fishy.
"Well. We can't look at it for THIS release." And then your perfectly valid bug is shuffled off into a nice category where it won't upset their bug count for the release effort.
Note that the total number of bugs in Lenny is actually around 1800- only by a pretty fine comb have they been able to claim "only" 360 bugs.
Please help metamoderate.
...this release had been called Lemmy instead, the jokes would have been, well, I guess louder for a start.
It's a small world and it smells funny; I'd buy another if it wasn't for the money; Take back what I paid (SoM)
Is either icedtea6 or openjdk going to make it for lenny?
Trump Ubuntu in their weird names, call it Lemmy instead.
You might at least get a good look at Debian from people other than us just on the name alone.
Perl, n. A language spoken by Eskimos.
Is there (or will there be) a Squiggy?
I can't believe how bad the sentences are for killing a rabbit.
"and by extension, in the inner sanctum source lists of distributions such as Ubuntu that are based on it"
Ubuntu is built off a snapshot of Unstable, so I don't see how Debian's freeze will affect it.
Just to mention, this is oddly enough that Mandriva get's called as GNU/Linux and Debian gets called as Linux.... :-)
Because no one anymore cares what does something mean and why it
Guess it depends on where Ubuntu will be in September. I'm on an 8.04 64-bit boot today. If I can fix the Samba and ipp funkiness, I _might_ consider switching from my Lenny boot for the 64-bit coolness.
Pretty much half of one, half of another from what I see. Not using FF3 on Debian because they didn't have the DOM-inspector package last time I looked and Ubuntu does. Debian pushed Drupal5.8 last week, Ubuntu pushed a 5.7 security update this week. So if you use both packages, which distro is ahead?
The one thing for sure is that Heron is pretty and I have never gotten compiz to work properly in Lenny (maybe because nvidia-glx is only in unstable?).
I'm pretty excited about this. I run Etch on a handful of servers and i've never seen a Linux distrib have such a wonderful combination of absolute stability, ease of use, and community support. This is, of course just my opinion ;)
Can't wait for Lenny!
Great! Did they say what year?
Slow down, cowboy! It has been 4 hours since you last posted. You must wait another few hours.
1) It's Luk, not Luke
2) He's a Release Manager, not the Debian project's maintainer. Whatever that is.
Sometime during Eternal September.
Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
It won't go that far, but it will be damn close and I have to say I'm impressed.
Their previous "new" releases were old at the same time as they were "new".
I installed Lenny last week (I've not used Debian in about a year or so) and I was practically "shocked" at how up to date it is, given that the final release is coming up.
Kudos to the Debian team!
Now if they could just do something about that Iceweasel/Icedove/Iceape/Iceowel nonsense...
Scott
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