Differences between revisions 1 and 13 (spanning 12 versions)
Revision 1 as of 2004-01-11 21:34:01
Size: 1301
Editor: anonymous
Comment:
Revision 13 as of 2004-12-23 06:50:22
Size: 1413
Editor: anonymous
Comment:
Deletions are marked like this. Additions are marked like this.
Line 6: Line 6:
 * The package is at least 14 days old.  * The package is at least 10 days old.
Line 18: Line 18:
It is more unstable than DebianStable, but not as crazy as DebianUnstable. It is more unstable than DebianStable (DebianWoody), but not as crazy as DebianUnstable (["DebianSid"]). See also DebianStability.
Line 22: Line 22:
If you wonder why a package (or a particular version thereof) is not yet in testing, see http://bjorn.haxx.se/debian . If you wonder why a package (or a particular version thereof) is not yet in testing, see http://bjorn.haxx.se/debian.

See
also:

 * ["FromTestingToStable"]
.
 * AptDirectory

Debian testing is the current development cycle of Debian.

A package is installed into the testing dist from DebianUnstable automatically when a list of requirements is fulfilled:

  • The package is at least 10 days old.
  • The package has been built for all the architectures which the present version in testing was built for.
  • Installing the package into testing will not make the distribution more uninstallable.
  • The package does not introduce new release critical bugs.

These requirements should assure that testing is in a pretty workable state but still developing. Especially when packages get restructured, packages that are not quite releasable get into testing, so not all the fun of using a developmental version is removed.

An example of testing's unstableness is the upgrade from perl-5.6.0 to perl-5.6.1 which made perl unable to find its modules if they were from a package built with perl-5.6.0. Setting the environment variable ["PERL5LIB"] to /usr/lib/perl/5.6.0 solved the problem.

It is more unstable than DebianStable (DebianWoody), but not as crazy as DebianUnstable (["DebianSid"]). See also DebianStability.

DebianSarge is the current testing distro.

If you wonder why a package (or a particular version thereof) is not yet in testing, see http://bjorn.haxx.se/debian.

See also: