Time to move from Red Hat to Debian?
Posted Nov 6, 2003 12:51 UTC (Thu) by
evgeny (subscriber, #774)
Parent article:
Time to move from Red Hat to Debian?
> Stability. Debian's release cycle, at an average of about one stable
> release every two years, is slow by any standard. Yet, this conservative
> approach means that the releases are extremely well-tested and
> comparatively bug-free.
It's true, but what's good in the stability if it comes at the expense of a serious feature lacking? And being one-two years behind the mainstream releases of most packages means just that: feature lacking. Whenever one needs a newer PHP/Postgres/SpamAssassin/... the answer is either install them manually (and then what's the point of apt-get and all the greatness behind it) or to move to testing/unstable. At this point one usually hears "Well, Debian/testing is as stable as most other 'stable' distros". I agree mostly, BUT:
(from http://www.debian.org/security/faq)
Q: How is security handled for testing and unstable?
A: The short answer is: it's not. Testing and unstable are rapidly moving targets and the security team does not have the resources needed to properly support those. If you want to have a secure (and stable) server you are strongly encouraged to stay with stable. However, the security secretaries will try to fix problems in testing and unstable after they are fixed in the stable release.
Which literally means you'll have to leave with security holes unpatched for an unspecified amount of time - not a pleasant feeling, I'd say. And mixing stable/unstable on the same box is quite a hell of maintenance, given mutually incompatible versions of libc etc (and while running an unstable version of SpamAssassin isn't very risky, an unstable libc probably is).
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