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Debian GNU/Linux 5.0 "Lenny" Released

Alexander "Tolimar" Reichle-Schmehl writes "The Debian Project is pleased to announce the official release of Debian GNU/Linux version 5.0 (codenamed Lenny) after 22 months of constant development. With 12 supported computer architectures, more than 23,000 packages built from over 12,000 source packages and 63 languages for the new graphical installer, this release sets new records, once again. Software available in 5.0 includes Linux 2.6.26, KDE 3.5.10, Gnome 2.22.2, X.Org 7.3, OpenOffice.org 2.4.1, GIMP 2.4.7, Iceweasel 3.0.6, Apache 2.2.9, Xen 3.2.1 and GCC 4.3.2. Other notable features are X autoconfiguring itself, full read-write support for NTFS, Java programs in the main repository and a single Blu-Ray disc installation media. You can get the ISOs via bittorrent. The Debian Project also wishes to announce that this release is dedicated to Thiemo Seufer, a Debian Developer who died on December 26th, 2008 in a tragic car accident. As a valuable member of the Debian Project, he will be sorely missed."

37 of 386 comments (clear)

  1. Best KDE 3.5 distro? by nicc777 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Still KDE 3.5 - so perhaps this will be the KDE user's distro of choice?

    --
    Need an ISP in South Africa?
    1. Re:Best KDE 3.5 distro? by a09bdb811a · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Yes, the timing has worked out perfectly.

      I run Debian testing, so I've been on 3.5 for a long time, and very happily I might add.

      Now when sid starts moving again, KDE 4.2 will go in - completely avoiding the earlier, less complete releases that everybody was ranting about.

      Couldn't have worked out better, and is a reminder that you don't always need to be on the bleeding edge anyway.

      Debian has a very good KDE packaging team, btw.

    2. Re:Best KDE 3.5 distro? by ultrabot · · Score: 4, Informative

      Now when sid starts moving again, KDE 4.2 will go in - completely avoiding the earlier, less complete releases that everybody was ranting about.

      Hopefully they will freeze KDE 4.3 with Qt 4.5. Freezing kde at 4.2 would seem like a mistake, when you consider that KDE people mostly focus on fixing bugs for 4.3. Also, Qt 4.5 should bring big performance improvements.

      --
      Save your wrists today - switch to Dvorak
    3. Re:Best KDE 3.5 distro? by turgid · · Score: 5, Funny

      Slackware users use a gui?

      Only to multiplex xterm, and xeyes to point to the mouse.

    4. Re:Best KDE 3.5 distro? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

      Hi. I'm the infamous Anonymous Coward, and it's time we had a talk.

      For years now, I've been enhancing the discussion on Slashdot through interesting interjections and humorous anecdotes (often about homosexual African Americans), but I feel things just aren't working out.

      It takes me an awful lot of time, researching composing and spell chekcing the many hundreds of valuable posts I make a day, and although I don't request anything in return all I ever see is abuse. You moderate my comments down for absolutely no good reason.

      I've had enough.

      From this point on I'm just not going to bother. It's over.

      I've been feeling this way for a while, slowly I've put less and less effort in my posts, repeating the same ideas over and over and, now, even started repeating whole posts verbatim.

      It's been fun, Slashdot, but I'm disillusioned. You broke my heart, and I am never doing to give you the benefit of my insight again.

      Be happy.
      Love and regrets,
      Anon.

    5. Re:Best KDE 3.5 distro? by Daengbo · · Score: 4, Informative

      I'm using Lenny right now (though Gnome), and I see both 3.5 and 4 available in Synaptic.

      We shouldn't forget the Debian Live project which has live CDs for Gnome, KDE, XFCE, and LXDE.

    6. Re:Best KDE 3.5 distro? by harry666t · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Huh? I've switched from Intrepid to Lenny on my laptop two months ago because Gnome 2.24 had broken session management (or rather: none at all), KDE 4.x had broken everything else, and KDE 3.x was ported... poorly. Debian is great for tracking the latest, newest, hottest NON-BROKEN versions of stuff. Sorry, I'm using my computer to do WORK, and a working computer is MUCH more valuable than a computer with a GUI with a higher version number in an "about" box.

      Each time I try out some other distro, I eventually come back to Debian. And Debian will always forgive me and welcome me like a good, old friend. Debian, I love you.

    7. Re:Best KDE 3.5 distro? by tomhudson · · Score: 4, Funny

      Hey! I have a couple of VLC windows open for pron!

      On slackware? Fess up - you're piping your pr0n through aalib or libcaca as ASCII-art. Otherwise, you're not really hard-core.

    8. Re:Best KDE 3.5 distro? by jetxee · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Try openSUSE (and use this link to get all the media codecs with one click). Try Fedora. Try Mandriva Heck, try Slackware.

      A linux without apt-get? No way! Not once again!

    9. Re:Best KDE 3.5 distro? by adavies42 · · Score: 4, Funny

      real slackware users multiplex shells with gnu screen

      --
      Media that can be recorded and distributed can be recorded and distributed.
      -kfg
  2. A Debian release! by jamesmcm · · Score: 5, Funny

    Savor this moment guys, a Debian release is like a Solar eclipse, you are lucky if you get to see one in your lifetime!

    1. Re:A Debian release! by wahgnube · · Score: 5, Informative

      Huh?

      While it's easy to pile on with the melodrama, the last stable release, Etch, was in the middle of '07. A year and a half is an entirely reasonable amount of time to wait for an operating system release.

      I, for one, congratulate them on and thank them for their timely release!

    2. Re:A Debian release! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Informative
    3. Re:A Debian release! by petermgreen · · Score: 5, Informative

      note: theese lengths only take account of the month not the time in the month so they may be a little off but they are good enough for the purpose

      buzz->rex 6 months
      rex->bo 6 months
      bo->hamm 13 months
      hamm->slink 8 months
      slink->potato 17 months
      potato->woody 23 months
      woody->sarge 35 months
      sarge->etch 22 months
      etch->lenny 22 months

      --
      note: i'm known as plugwash most places but i screwd up registering that here somehow in the past and now can't register
    4. Re:A Debian release! by Kjella · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Sarge really was the source of these endless jokes. Almost three years, on a Linux that was considerably less mature than it is today was forever. Remember that all releases are tested and mature by the time they are included in stable, so they were at the worst more like four years behind the bleeding edge. Obviously you don't want a server anywhere near the bleeding edge, but damn do I understand all the application developers that said "You're running THAT?! We stopped development on that branch years ago, nobody backports anything not even security fixes anymore". A distro has to be a team effort with the people developing it - you can't expect Debian people to fix 20000 old packages alone. The current situation is just fine for a server OS, though I wouldn't run my desktop on it. I used to run testing until early 2007 but for all the faults Ubuntu has, having semi-annual "packs" is better than the constantly changing flow that testing is.

      --
      Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
    5. Re:A Debian release! by risk+one · · Score: 5, Funny

      A year and a half is an entirely reasonable amount of time to wait for an operating system release.

      I run Vista, you insensitive clod!

    6. Re:A Debian release! by wall0159 · · Score: 5, Funny

      Don't worry - I hear that the stable release of Vista is coming Real Soon Now ;-)

    7. Re:A Debian release! by jonadab · · Score: 4, Insightful

      > > One would think so. After all, proprietary operating systems
      > > sometimes go twice that long between service packs.
      > But they aren't tied to the software they run so tightly.

      Debian isn't that way because of anything Debian does wrong. It's that way because when application developers put out a new version of anything for Linux, they typically make it *require* the absolute latest version of every library it uses, which effectively means it won't run on an operating system that's more than a couple of months old.

      It isn't just that there aren't ready-to-install packages. You can't install the latest Firefox on Debian etch even if you're willing to go to the trouble to compile it yourself, because it requires a newer version of GTK than the one in Debian. Bear in mind, GTK is the main widget set, the thing used to draw windows and scrollbars and checkboxes and so on in the graphical operating environment (Gnome). That's NOT something you're ever going to upgrade independently of the operating system (and even if you wanted to, you generally can't because the new version of GTK probably requires the absolute latest versions of twelve other things, and so on; when you get to the end of the chain, you probably find out that libc or something requires a more recent kernel than your system is based on). New versions of applications *SHOULD* support three-year-old versions of GTK. But they almost never do.

      And if it's not GTK it's libc or glibc or some other basic part of the platform API. Again, new versions of applications *SHOULD* support three-year-old versions of these libraries, but the almost never do. I don't happen to know which library is (or which libraries are) the holdup for Subversion, but if it were possible to just compile it for etch, somebody would have done so, and the package would be available -- probably not from the official Debian etch repositories, but from backports or somewhere. If it's not available at all for Debian stable, it's almost certainly because it won't compile, because it requires a hyper-recent version of some library or another. And that's NOT the platform or distribution's fault. That's the application developer's fault.

      Now, when the curmudgeonly sysadmin insists on running oldstable for months and months after the new stable release comes out, that's arguably a different matter. In that case, you don't necessarily expect new versions of application software to work. Although, on other platforms (e.g., Windows, or Mac OS X for that matter), you still would.

      --
      Cut that out, or I will ship you to Norilsk in a box.
  3. Screenshots + DPL interview by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    Some first impressions on the release, screenshots and an explanation of the delay from Steve McIntyre, the Debian Project Leader, here: http://tuxradar.com/content/lenny-has-landed

  4. Thiemo by emj · · Score: 5, Interesting

    He was a great hacker, it's nice to know that more people will remember him.

    1. Re:Thiemo by bap · · Score: 5, Funny

      Yes, it is a shame he died in a tragic car accident, instead of one of those non-tragic fatal accidents.

  5. Re:remember by tenco · · Score: 4, Informative

    Don't do this. Squeeze won't be supported by the testing security team in the beginning: http://lists.debian.org/debian-testing-security-announce/2008/12/msg00019.html

  6. Re:KDE 4.2 practically already available by nutshell42 · · Score: 4, Insightful
    Honestly, if you're the kind of guy who uses Debian stable you certainly will stay with KDE 3.5 until at least 4.5.

    Good to see that in the time of bleeding edge releases-every-6-months distros there's still a choice that actually allows you to get work done.

    --
    Don't think of it as a flame---it's more like an argument that does 3d6 fire damage
  7. Re:Blu-Ray? by sinan_imam · · Score: 4, Informative

    It is not going to be in the archives because it would waste a huge amount of space. You may build it yourself using jigdo.

  8. Newsworthy. Actuall news. by Qbertino · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Just reading this (Note I am not a Debian User anymore) has me noticing just how much the quality is in the FOSS field compared to MicroSuck, Adobemedia and any other company that's just in it for the money and not the technical perfection. Despite all marketing gibberish to the contrary.

    While I've been using Ubuntu for it's ease of use in recent years and see Debian more as a kind of building kit when I need a more customized Linux setup, it is none-the-less a terrific feat to wrap up a product that meets Debians quality standards, as opposed to those of - let's say - Windows Vista.

    Even the slashdot post on the new Debian has more content that a MS press release.

    That all observed and said, congrats to the Debian crew for yet another release of a great OS and Software kit.

    --
    We suffer more in our imagination than in reality. - Seneca
    1. Re:Newsworthy. Actuall news. by MrNaz · · Score: 4, Funny

      Yea, that Debian patch Tuesday is *such* a pain in the ass.

      --
      I hate printers.
    2. Re:Newsworthy. Actuall news. by heffrey · · Score: 4, Funny

      You can't beat the fantastic quality of Debian, especially when it comes to the fantastic work done with Valgrind and Purify to remove some of the bugs in the OpenSSL seeding code used to generate encryption keys. Obviously no closed source code could possibly live up to those marvellous standards. It's just not possible to write high quality closed source code. In fact the mere act of releasing previously closed source code under the GPL makes it high quality.

    3. Re:Newsworthy. Actuall news. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

      Oh ffs, the OpenSSL developers were just as responsible for the snafu as Debian was. More so I'd say since the Debian developer asked on the openssl-dev list about his patch and whether anyone had any objections to it. Here's the response he got from a OpenSSL developer:http://marc.info/?l=openssl-dev&m=114652287210110&w=2/

      List: openssl-dev
      Subject: Re: Random number generator, uninitialised data and valgrind.
      From: Ulf_Möller
      Date: 2006-05-01 22:34:12
      Message-ID: 44568CE4.9020906 () openssl ! org
      [Download message RAW]

      Kurt Roeckx schrieb:
      > What I currently see as best option is to actually comment out
      > those 2 lines of code. But I have no idea what effect this
      > really has on the RNG. The only effect I see is that the pool
      > might receive less entropy. But on the other hand, I'm not even
      > sure how much entropy some unitialised data has.
      >
      Not much. If it helps with debugging, I'm in favor of removing them.
      (However the last time I checked, valgrind reported thousands of bogus
      error messages. Has that situation gotten better?)

      Got that? He was given the ok by a OpenSSL developer. They're every bit as responsible as Debian.

  9. Coming Soon! by stonedcat · · Score: 4, Funny

    Duke Nukem Forever

    --
    You can't take the sky from me.
  10. Re:Blu-Ray? by 0100010001010011 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Don't forget the 'best' install out there: NetInstall. Unless you actually want to download 31 CDs or 5 DVDs worth of stuff. The best part about Debian is the mix and match of installing what I want. I honestly can't fathom trying to download 20Gigs of stuff just to make a desktop unless I plan on installing in middle of nowhere.

  11. release with 84 RC bugs? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I might be missing something here, but aren't there still 84 release-critical bugs open on lenny? I understand a number of them have been deferred to lenny.1, but I had expected this number to drop further before a release was made. Has Debian changed their release policy?

    [captcha: prudence]

    1. Re:release with 84 RC bugs? by ultrabot · · Score: 4, Funny

      I understand a number of them have been deferred to lenny.1, but I had expected this number to drop further before a release was made. Has Debian changed their release policy?

      Yes, they actually made a release.

      *drumroll*

      --
      Save your wrists today - switch to Dvorak
    2. Re:release with 84 RC bugs? by tenco · · Score: 5, Informative
  12. Hardware donations by wikinerd · · Score: 4, Informative
  13. Re:OT question ... by Hatta · · Score: 5, Insightful

    There's no legal way to do many worthwhile things in this world. Don't worry about it. You're here to live your life, not obey laws.

    --
    Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
  14. Re:OT question ... by jopet · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Buy stuff with Linux support and quit your bitching.

    I think I was not bitching but asking a question. The problem is that I would love to buy (yes buy) stuff with Linux support - problem is, that it often simply does not even exist.
    My original question was exactly about one of the things I would consider to be of major importance: the ability to play blue-ray movies on the desktop. As far as I can see there is no legal way whatsoever to do this on Linux and there is no legal way in sight either.
    I can assure you that I do check for Linux support, but the harsh reality is that, especially in Europe, where the selection of goods is probably a lot smaller than in the US, it is very often simply impossible to get anything decent that also works with Linux. Apart from blue-ray movie playing -- there simply is no decent GPS device that allows me to transfer map data to the device on Linux.
    I guess my point is that these are serious problems for making Linux more common for a broader user-base and I would love to see constructive ideas how to deal with them instead of ignoring the problem, routinely putting the blame on hardware companies and disregarding anyone who raises the issue as a troll.

  15. Re:OT question ... by drinkypoo · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I think I was not bitching but asking a question. The problem is that I would love to buy (yes buy) stuff with Linux support - problem is, that it often simply does not even exist.

    Please name a product you have been searching for, where you cannot find something which suits your needs which has Linux support.

    My original question was exactly about one of the things I would consider to be of major importance: the ability to play blue-ray movies on the desktop. As far as I can see there is no legal way whatsoever to do this on Linux and there is no legal way in sight either.

    My point was that this is a result of the legal manouverings of the people behind Blu-Ray. If you buy Blu-Ray then you are voting with your dollars for standards which make interoperability difficult or even impossible. You have no one but yourself to blame.

    At some point you have to decide if you have principles or not. Clearly, you do not believe in the ability to play purchased media on Open Source platforms if you actually spend money on Blu-Ray discs. There's no third way, and I wish people would stop pretending there is.

    I guess my point is that these are serious problems for making Linux more common for a broader user-base and I would love to see constructive ideas how to deal with them instead of ignoring the problem, routinely putting the blame on hardware companies and disregarding anyone who raises the issue as a troll.

    Obviously you don't understand that the world is capitalistic, and/or don't understand how capitalism works.

    The only vote that you have that matters is how you spend your dollars. Whether that's what products you choose to buy (or not) or whether you elect to pay your taxes (or not) or activities you choose to engage in (or not) due to their tax situation... it's all based on money. The entire world (yes, China too) works on the principle that what makes you more money is good. Therefore if you choose to spend money on closed standards, the world will provide you with more closed standards, because obviously there is money in them. If you choose to spend money on a shitty movie or a crappy album just because it's a member of your chosen genre or put out by someone whose other work you like, you are voting for them to make more shit. Do you see how this works? By the same token, if you buy a Blu-Ray disc when it is difficult to play on Linux, you are voting for making it difficult to play media on Linux. And at some point you have to take personal responsibility. You have to make the decision to only support media which is delivered on your terms.

    Different people have chosen to achieve this goal in different ways. For some, they make the decision to engage in civil disobedience by using a program whose use is actually proscribed by law in their jurisdiction to play the media that they've paid for. I am unaware of anyone actually ever being arrested for playing a DVD or Blu-Ray disc that they actually purchased on an unlicensed device, and do not believe that laws should be followed simply because they exist. I am skeptical that you actually follow every law in effect where you live, and in any case if you have not memorized the code you can't be sure, so I am not clear as to the precise nature of your objection.

    Anyway, by the same token, following the DMCA is equivalent to voting for it. Don't obey unless you aim to be a slave. Yes, it is risky to disobey. Yes, you have an obligation to disobey an unjust law. Let me just go ahead and terminate this thread by invoking Godwin here by saying that "just following orders" is not and never has been a valid excuse for supporting tyranny.

    --
    "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"