| ▲ | koverstreet 2 hours ago | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
You definitely need different channels for high priority fixes and normal releases, stable and testing releases and all that. But two years is impractical and Debian gets a ton of friction over it. Web browsers and maybe one or two other packages are able to carve out exceptions, because those packages are big enough for the rules to bend and no one can argue with a straight face that Debian is going to somehow muster up the manpower to do backports right. But for everyone else who has to deal with Debian shipping ancient dependencies or upstream package maintainers who are expected to deal with bug reports from ancient versions is expected to just suck it up, because no one else is big enough and organized enough to say "hey, it's 2026, we have better ways and this has gotten nutty". Maybe the new influx of LLM discovered security vulnerabilities will start to change the conversation, I'm curious how it'll play out. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| ▲ | rlpb 2 hours ago | parent | next [-] | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
> ...upstream package maintainers who are expected to deal with bug reports from ancient versions... They are not expected to deal with this. This is the responsibility of the Debian package maintainer. If you (as an upstream) licensed your software in a manner that allows Debian to do what it does, and they do this to serve their users who actually want that, you are wrong to then complain about it. If you don't want this, don't license your software like that, and Debian and their users will use some other software instead. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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| ▲ | b112 2 hours ago | parent | prev [-] | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Good grief, you are not forced to uae Debian! Please leave the only stable distro alone, and just use one more to your style. I assure you, enormous sums of people prefer Debian the way it is. I do not, ever, want "new stuff" in stable. I have better things to do than fight daily change in a distro, it's beyond a waste of time and just silly. If you want new things, leave stable alone, and just run Debian testing! It updates all the time, and is still more stable than most other distros. Debian is the way it is on purpose, it is not a mistake, not left over reasoning, and nothing you said seems relevant in this regard. For example, there is no better way than backporting, when it comes to maintaining compatibility. And that's what many people want. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||