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I was surprised to know that Lenny already promoted to "stable" - among some of my clients there is some fear that Debian would want to compete with Ubuntu for the desktop and forget its server devotion.

"Only" 2 years between 4.0 Etch and 5.0 Lenny is unprecedented in Debian time scale. Version inflation? is it because SPARC-32 support is being dropped? otherwise the changes between 4.0 Etch and Lenny don't seem bigger than say 3.0 Woody to 3.1 Sarge (3 years apart).

Support was longest for Woody (4 full years), then it was dropped to just under 3 years for both 3.1 and 4.0 (still pretty good, I reckon).

It's still undecided for Lenny but I'd like to know about this before making my next server distro decision.

What are your thoughts about this?

Reference: - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Debian#Releases - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Debian_releases.svg

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This site is for programming questions only. Please read the FAQ. – Cody Brocious Feb 16 at 10:36
By the way, why is there "not-programming-related" tag available, when the site is only for programming questions? – Joonas Pulakka Feb 16 at 10:42
It marks the question as openly off-topic. The community can still decide it's interesting enough to keep around. – Tiberiu Ana Feb 16 at 10:49
We also lack a flame-bait tag. – Keltia Feb 16 at 10:51
@Keltia : I fail to see where is the flame-bait, you zealot. I'm just making a question about something that concerns me as maintainer of several Debian systems. ---- This is a sys-admin related question. I've seen MANY of those, just look in related. – nachik Feb 16 at 11:05

2 Answers

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Where's the problem? Etch will be supported for one year from now, and upgrading it to Lenny is a matter of typing a few commands.

Debian seems still to be the most serious server distro. It's the rock that Ubuntu is built on.

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This can break many applications, I don't recommend you do that in a system where other users are running applications you don't know 100% and even then you can never be sure. – nachik Feb 16 at 11:08
Yeah, it's a bit extreme operation so everything is possible... but in principle it's easy :-) Of course you have to back up everything so that you can take back the upgrade, just in case. – Joonas Pulakka Feb 16 at 11:14
Yes, that's great when you can afford the downtime, and you can tell all your users to just stop using their legacy stuff. Still, Debian is the best as for long-term support that doesn't cost you half a lung. – nachik Feb 16 at 13:38
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"Only" 2 years between 4.0 Etch and 5.0 Lenny is unprecedented in Debian time scale. Version inflation? is it because SPARC-32 support is being dropped? otherwise the changes between 4.0 Etch and Lenny don't seem bigger than say 3.0 Woody to 3.1 Sarge (3 years apart).

In a world where transparent development is normal, "major.minor" style version numbers are largely meaningless. Linus and the Ubuntu and Fedora people seem to think the same.

If you have been happy with Debian for your servers, don't switch, just (apt-get) upgrade.

BTW, my brain hurts from looking at that meaningless piece of graph on Wikipedia.

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