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Re: Version and Release



Stable always have nickname.

Sid is always sid :)

Testing is "something" that will be next stable - in this day old stable
become old-stable and...

...old-stable has same nickname as it was. New stable will have
offcourse another nickname.


Hope this helps. If not, just ask again.



Dnia 2016-06-08, śro o godzinie 13:28 +0200, c.holper@ades.at pisze:
> AAhhhh... I see.
> That makes perfect sense.
> 
> Thanks!!!
> 
> One additional question please:
> Does stable and testing have nicknames too - like unstable = Sid??
> 
> Chris
> 
> 
> 
> On 2016-06-08 13:19, Mark Fletcher wrote:
> 
> > 
> > On Wed, 8 Jun 2016 at 19:51, c.holper@ades.at <c.holper@ades.at>
> > wrote:
> > 
> >         Yes, I already knew this.
> >         But I still get not the connection.
> >         
> >         Chris
> >         
> >         On 2016-06-08 12:18, humbert.olivier.1@free.fr wrote:
> >         > Hi Chris,
> >         >
> >         > good questions you're asking yourself here.
> >         > Check https://www.debian.org/releases/ .
> >         > This is a point where you want to start regarding this.
> >         >
> >         > Hope that helps,
> >         > Olivier
> >         >
> >         >
> >         > ----- Mail original -----
> >         > De: "c holper" <c.holper@ades.at>
> >         > À: debian-user@lists.debian.org
> >         > Envoyé: Mercredi 8 Juin 2016 12:03:12
> >         > Objet: Version and Release
> >         >
> >         > Hi!
> >         >
> >         > I am not completely new to Debian but I never really
> >         understood the
> >         > version-system.
> >         >
> >         > I understand the versions have nicknames (8 = jessie, 7 =
> >         wheezy, 6 =
> >         > squeeze, ...).
> >         > I also understand there are 3 releases of every version
> >         (stable,
> >         > testing, unstable) and
> >         > it is clear that stable has the oldest but most bugfree
> >         version of
> >         > software and unstable the opposit.
> >         >
> >         > But it seems there is some living connection between the
> >         current testing
> >         > and the future version...
> >         > And what is "sid"?
> >         >
> >         > I downloades 8 testing (some months ago) and in my
> >         apt-sources is
> >         > jessie. Would it be something else if I chose stable??
> >         > How can I see it in apt?
> >         > Is there a better way to determine the release beside
> >         lsb_relsease?
> >         > /etc/debian_version is pretty clear but only the verion is
> >         inside.
> >         >
> >         > Please clearifiy for me the impact of the the once chosen
> >         release in
> >         > connection with the current and future version.
> >         > Big thankyou!
> >         >
> >         > Cheers,
> >         > Chris
> >         >
> >         >
> >         
> > There aren't 3 versions of each release, there's only one. Stable,
> > testing and unstable are nicknames / status codes applied to a given
> > release at any stage of its lifecycle. Right now Jessie is stable,
> > Stretch is testing. The unstable release is always called Sid, that
> > never changes. When stretch is considered stable enough, it will get
> > a release number (9.0), and be referred to as stable. At this point
> > Jessie will be "oldstable" and wheezy will pass into legend.
> > Whatever Sid looks like at that time, will get a new Toy Story
> > character name assigned, and become the new "testing". Sid and
> > "testing" will at that moment be identical, and will start to
> > diverge as stuff gets into Sid, and takes a while to prove itself
> > enough to get into "testing". HTH Mark
> 



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