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Krause ,
@Krause@lemmygrad.ml avatar

Fedora Workstation

transistor ,
@transistor@lemdro.id avatar

I’m using debian.

wildbus8979 ,

Seconded

mouse ,
@mouse@midwest.social avatar

I live on the more unstable side, I like Debian Unstable/Sid. I also recommend Siduction as it’s based on Debian Unstable.

transistor ,
@transistor@lemdro.id avatar

I’ve been actually trying Debian Testing for past few weeks.

mfn ,
@mfn@mfn.pub avatar

Debian not recommends testing for everyday using. You definetely have to look at the site. Afaik it is basically a bad version of unstable that gets slow updates and it is only for testing purposes.

danielton ,
@danielton@lemmy.world avatar

Yes, this is correct. The way Testing works, it is very possible (indeed, likely) that you could be stuck with a security vulnerability for weeks. You should use either stable or unstable.

transistor ,
@transistor@lemdro.id avatar

Can unstable be used as a daily driver?

danielton ,
@danielton@lemmy.world avatar

Yes, as long as you pay attention to what packages are being added and removed when you perform an update. Once in a great while, there have been instances of buggy packages mass-removing other packages due to a bug.

That said, Debian-based distros like Ubuntu usually base their stable releases on unstable. Unstable doesn’t refer to software stability. Rather, it refers to the idea that the system-level packages could change throughout the development cycle.

Security updates come to unstable through normal package updates, which testing doesn’t get until everything makes it through a probationary period with no “serious” bugs filed and no dependency issues. And if any package that the package needing the security patch depends on also has a serious bug filed, the process could take even longer.

transistor ,
@transistor@lemdro.id avatar

Packages from debian unstable trickle down to testing in 8-10 days usually if all the other criteria are met. But I have also heard that important security updates go straight from unstable to stable and then come to testing at a later time. When is that later date I have no idea.

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