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Re: Version and Release



On Wed 08 Jun 2016 at 13:37:47 (+0200), Norbert Kiszka wrote:
> Dnia 2016-06-08, śro o godzinie 13:28 +0200, c.holper@ades.at pisze:
> > 
> > One additional question please:
> > Does stable and testing have nicknames too - like unstable = Sid??
> 
> 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.

stable *is* a nickname.

One day, someone will put a diagram on the Debian website.
It might look something like this:


Codename      Nicknames
(directory)   (symlinks)

experimental  rc-buggy (Not a distribution, just an assortment of packages)

sid           unstable (this symlink never changes)

------------------------

buster  
stretch    <- testing
jessie     <- stable
wheezy     <- oldstable
squeeze 
lenny	
etch	
sarge	
woody	
potato	
slink	
hamm	
bo	
rex	
buzz	

On a Release Day, all the nicknames that have a <- against them
are moved upwards by one line.

With the exceptions above the ---- line, the collection of packages
under a given codename doesn't change. The nicknames do.

Also on a Release Day, a release number is applied to the new release.
So jessie was released as 8.0 and has been upgraded (renumbered) as
far as 8.5. This numbering scheme started with etch (4.0).
Before etch, codenames could be released as point releases
(sarge was 3.1 but never 3.0). stretch will be 9.0 but isn't there yet.

If you feel the need to verify this, just type:

$ ftp ftp.debian.org
Name: anonymous
Password: <your email address>
ftp> cd debian
ftp> cd dists
ftp> ls

Cheers,
David.


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