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Operating Systems Linux Debian Debian Testing (Is it Stable) Post 302768841 by crookedmaze on Saturday 9th of February 2013 08:43:41 PM
Old 02-09-2013
Thanks for clarifying, I find it a little confusing that unstable and testing are still fairly stable (when their labeled the way they are), I think I am going to stick with Stable as of now because I am really enjoying using Stable and am not having any problems with it. One of the things I really enjoy about using Stable (this might also be true for testing and unstable) but unlike Ubuntu (its probably because Ubuntu uses more currently packages) I don't have to install a lot of updates (sometimes I had 30-50 or even 80 packages that needed updating but now its more like 5-10).
 

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UPGRADE-SYSTEM.CONF(5)						 Debian GNU/Linux					    UPGRADE-SYSTEM.CONF(5)

NAME
upgrade-system.conf - Configuration file for upgrade-system(8) DESCRIPTION
upgrade-system.conf is the configuration file for the upgrade-system(8) Debian administration utility. This file specifies command options used for calling apt-get(8) and deborphan(1) within upgrade-system(8). Lines starting with a hash mark ("#") and empty lines are ignored. EXAMPLE
The configuration file contains four variables: CLEANOPTS This variable selects which one of autoclean or clean to execute as the apt-get(8) cleaning command. For example: CLEANOPTS="clean" Consult the apt-get(8) manual page to check which options are available for any particular APT version, before setting this variable. UPGRADEOPTS This variable specifies which one of dist-upgrade or upgrade to execute as the apt-get(8) upgrade command and the command options. For example: UPGRADEOPTS="-f -u dist-upgrade" Consult the apt-get(8) manual page to check which options are available for any particular APT version, before setting this variable. ORPHANOPTS This variable specifies deborphan(1) command options. For example: ORPHANOPTS="--guess-all --libdevel --priority=2" One should read the deborphan(1) manual page to check which options are available for any particular version, before setting this variable. FLAUSCH Setting this variable enables various extremely pedantic purge options. This feature is totally experimental; usage is strongly discour- aged and should only be attempted by truly experienced Debian administrators. It can be used to sanitize a Debian system after a distribu- tion upgrade or to detect packages that don't conform to the Debian Policy. Setting the variable as a command line environment, only when needed, is considered a safer approach than adding it to upgrade-system.conf variables. SECURITY
Because upgrade-system is an APT front-end, all precautions relating to APT configuration should be observed. Special attention is required to: deborphan Certain combinations of deborphan(1) options purge a dangerous quantity of packages, potentially leaving a system in a severely crippled state. /etc/apt/preferences To prevent untested packages from overwriting stable ones, setting this combination of APT preferences is recommended: Package: * Pin: release a=stable Pin-Priority: 990 Package: * Pin: release a=testing Pin-Priority: 500 Package: * Pin: release a=unstable Pin-Priority: 100 Package: * Pin: release a=experimental Pin-Priority: 1 This enforces a priority to packages from Stable, yet still allows ones from Testing, Unstable or Experimental to get installed via appro- priate apt-get(8) options to override the default release. AUTHORS
Copyright (C) 2003-2004 Martin Zdrahal <martin.zdrahal@konflux.at> Copyright (C) 2004,2012 Christoph Schindler <hop@30hopsmax.at> Copyright (C) 2004-2012 Martin-Eric Racine <martin-eric.racine@iki.fi> LICENSE
GPLv2+: GNU GPL version 2 or later <http://gnu.org/licenses/gpl.html>. SEE ALSO
apt-get(8), apt_preferences(5), deborphan(1), upgrade-system(8). http://q-funk.iki.fi 2004-03-31 UPGRADE-SYSTEM.CONF(5)
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