- cross-posted to:
- debian@lemmy.ml
- cross-posted to:
- debian@lemmy.ml
Looking at Debian’s release-critical bugs, you can see that Trixie is close:
Testing now has fewer critical bugs than Stable, and the number is dropping quickly.
About 200 bugs still need to be fixed to get the number down to where the previous releases were done.
Maybe you can help? Bugs blocking the next release can be as simple as missing translations for the upgrade instructions.
The day I do the old fashioned
sudo apt update && sudo apt upgrade
and everything suddenly breaks is when I know I’m on Debian 13.Unless you change your sources.list, you’ll just update your current system.
unless they have
stable
instead ofbookworm
on theirsources.list
It defaults to the codename. Any installer you download will be either Bookworm or Sid right now.
I really wish they had easier way to switch to newer version. It works for me, since it’s not that hard to edit
sources.list
(ordebian.sources
nowadays), but I don’t get why they don’t make a tool that does a release upgrade like on Ubuntu. Could even list changes made to the sources file during execution for that matter.Yeah, I don’t know. Probably because people don’t immediately upgrade? A lot of people use a release until it goes EoL.
If you didn’t mess with your sources.list it won’t switch to the new release automatically.
debian updates usually go pretty smooth in my personal experience. last time i had an annoying problem with the nvidia proprietary drivers, but that was an exception (i had no such problem in previous updates) and i think it was my fault
Why would that break on Debian 13?
https://xkcd.com/1172/