Hello Gene,
gene heskett <gheskett@shentel.net> writes:
[udev update from proposed-updates]
I couldn't figure how to dl the file, so I snapshoted the diff screen
from [1], and will compare it to what I have from the patch, which it
appears I have not done to this machine, as I have /dev/serial/by-path
only here, no by-id. This bug is a showstopper for users of 3d printers.
Warning: Only do any of the following on a host you can afford to
break. If systemd malfunctions you may not even be able to boot the
system any more.
*-proposed-updates is an APT repository. The easiest way to access it is
to add it to sources.list:
=== Begin ===
deb http://deb.debian.org/debian/ bullseye-proposed-updates main
=== End ===
I added an APT preferences rule (create a file for it in
/etc/apt/preferences.d/) to update all systemd packages from
bullseye-proposed-updates:
=== Begin ===
Explanation: Pull in fix for Debian#1035094 before next point release
Package: libnss-myhostname libnss-mymachines libnss-resolve libnss-systemd libpam-systemd libsystemd0 libsystemd-dev libsystemd-shared libudev1 libudev1-udeb libudev-dev systemd systemd-boot systemd-boot-efi systemd-container systemd-coredump systemd-dev systemd-homed systemd-journal-remote systemd-oomd systemd-resolved systemd-standalone-sysusers systemd-standalone-tmpfiles systemd-sysv systemd-tests systemd-timesyncd systemd-userdbd udev udev-udeb
Pin: release n=bullseye-proposed-updates
Pin-Priority: 990
=== End ===
Then just upgrade like usual using APT.
If you want to download the packages manually (which gets tedious fast)
you can find them in the systemd directory [1] in the package
pool. bullseye-proposed-updates currently points at 247.3-7+deb11u3 (see
e.g. the amd64 Packages.xz [2]).
Sascha
[1] http://deb.debian.org/debian/pool/main/s/systemd/
[2] http://deb.debian.org/debian/dists/bullseye-proposed-updates/main/binary-amd64/Packages.xz