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Debian 11 "bullseye" released

Debian 11, codenamed "bullseye", has been released after just over two years of development. It has lots of updates, including to half a dozen different desktop environments, lots of tools and programming languages, and, of course, more. It is available for nine different architectures.
This release contains over 11,294 new packages for a total count of 59,551 packages, along with a significant reduction of over 9,519 packages which were marked as "obsolete" and removed. 42,821 packages were updated and 5,434 packages remained unchanged.

"bullseye" becomes our first release to provide a Linux kernel with support for the exFAT filesystem and defaults to using it for mount exFAT filesystems. Consequently it is no longer required to use the filesystem-in-userspace implementation provided via the exfat-fuse package. Tools for creating and checking an exFAT filesystem are provided in the exfatprogs package.


From:  Donald Norwood <donald-AT-debian.org>
To:  debian-announce-AT-lists.debian.org
Subject:  Debian 11 "bullseye" released
Date:  Sat, 14 Aug 2021 17:22:48 -0400
Message-ID:  <ebf24e6d-1d3f-e67b-edc9-bd7390b6fc65@debian.org>
Archive-link:  Article

------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Debian Project                               https://www.debian.org/
Debian 11 "bullseye" released                           press@debian.org
August 14th, 2021              https://www.debian.org/News/2021/20210814
------------------------------------------------------------------------


After 2 years, 1 month, and 9 days of development, the Debian project is
proud to present its new stable version 11 (code name "bullseye"), which
will be supported for the next 5 years thanks to the combined work of
the Debian Security team [1] and the Debian Long Term Support [2] team.

    1: https://security-team.debian.org/
    2: https://wiki.debian.org/LTS

Debian 11 "bullseye" ships with several desktop applications and
environments. Amongst others it now includes the desktop environments:

  * Gnome 3.38,
  * KDE Plasma 5.20,
  * LXDE 11,
  * LXQt 0.16,
  * MATE 1.24,
  * Xfce 4.16.

This release contains over 11,294 new packages for a total count of
59,551 packages, along with a significant reduction of over 9,519
packages which were marked as "obsolete" and removed. 42,821 packages
were updated and 5,434 packages remained unchanged.

"bullseye" becomes our first release to provide a Linux kernel with
support for the exFAT filesystem and defaults to using it for mount
exFAT filesystems. Consequently it is no longer required to use the
filesystem-in-userspace implementation provided via the exfat-fuse
package. Tools for creating and checking an exFAT filesystem are
provided in the exfatprogs package.

Most modern printers are able to use driverless printing and scanning
without the need for vendor specific (often non-free) drivers.
"bullseye" brings forward a new package, ipp-usb, which uses the vendor
neutral IPP-over-USB protocol supported by many modern printers. This
allows a USB device to be treated as a network device. The official SANE
driverless backend is provided by sane-escl in libsane1, which uses the
eSCL protocol.

Systemd in "bullseye" activates its persistent journal functionality, by
default, with an implicit fallback to volatile storage. This allows
users that are not relying on special features to uninstall traditional
logging daemons and switch over to using only the systemd journal.

The Debian Med team has been taking part in the fight against COVID-19
by packaging software for researching the virus on the sequence level
and for fighting the pandemic with the tools used in epidemiology; this
work will continue with focus on machine learning tools for both fields.
The team's work with Quality Assurance and Continuous integration is
critical to the consistent reproducible results required in the
sciences. Debian Med Blend has a range of performance critical
applications which now benefit from SIMD Everywhere. To install packages
maintained by the Debian Med team, install the metapackages named med-*,
which are at version 3.6.x.

Chinese, Japanese, Korean, and many other languages now have a new Fcitx
5 input method, which is the successor of the popular Fcitx4 in
"buster" ; this new version has much better Wayland (default display
manager) addon support.

Debian 11 "bullseye" includes numerous updated software packages (over
72% of all packages in the previous release), such as:

  * Apache 2.4.48
  * BIND DNS Server 9.16
  * Calligra 3.2
  * Cryptsetup 2.3
  * Emacs 27.1
  * GIMP 2.10.22
  * GNU Compiler Collection 10.2
  * GnuPG 2.2.20
  * Inkscape 1.0.2
  * LibreOffice 7.0
  * Linux kernel 5.10 series
  * MariaDB 10.5
  * OpenSSH 8.4p1
  * Perl 5.32
  * PHP 7.4
  * PostgreSQL 13
  * Python 3, 3.9.1
  * Rustc 1.48
  * Samba 4.13
  * Vim 8.2
  * more than 59,000 other ready-to-use software packages, built from
more than 30,000 source packages.

With this broad selection of packages and its traditional wide
architecture support, Debian once again stays true to its goal of being
"The Universal Operating System". It is suitable for many different use
cases: from desktop systems to netbooks; from development servers to
cluster systems; and for database, web, and storage servers. At the same
time, additional quality assurance efforts like automatic installation
and upgrade tests for all packages in Debian's archive ensure that
"bullseye" fulfills the high expectations that users have of a stable
Debian release.

A total of nine architectures are supported: 64-bit PC / Intel EM64T /
x86-64 (amd64), 32-bit PC / Intel IA-32 (i386), 64-bit little-endian
Motorola/IBM PowerPC (ppc64el), 64-bit IBM S/390 (s390x), for ARM, armel
and armhf for older and more recent 32-bit hardware, plus arm64 for the
64-bit "AArch64" architecture, and for MIPS, mipsel (little-endian)
architectures for 32-bit hardware and mips64el architecture for 64-bit
little-endian hardware.

If you simply want to try Debian 11 "bullseye" without installing it,
you can use one of the available live images [3] which load and run the
complete operating system in a read-only state via your computer's
memory.

    3: https://www.debian.org/CD/live/

These live images are provided for the amd64 and i386 architectures and
are available for DVDs, USB sticks, and netboot setups. The user can
choose among different desktop environments to try: GNOME, KDE Plasma,
LXDE, LXQt, MATE, and Xfce. Debian Live "bullseye" has a standard live
image, so it is also possible to try a base Debian system without any of
the graphical user interfaces.

Should you enjoy the operating system you have the option of installing
from the live image onto your computer's hard disk. The live image
includes the Calamares independent installer as well as the standard
Debian Installer. More information is available in the release notes [4]
and the live install images [5] sections of the Debian website.

    4: https://www.debian.org/releases/bullseye/releasenotes
    5: https://www.debian.org/CD/live/

To install Debian 11 "bullseye" directly onto your computer's hard disk
you can choose from a variety of installation media such as Blu-ray
Disc, DVD, CD, USB stick, or via a network connection. Several desktop
environments — Cinnamon, GNOME, KDE Plasma Desktop and Applications,
LXDE, LXQt, MATE and Xfce — may be installed through those images. In
addition, "multi-architecture" CDs are available which support
installation from a choice of architectures from a single disc. Or you
can always create bootable USB installation media (see the Installation
Guide [6] for more details).

    6: https://www.debian.org/releases/bullseye/installmanual

There has been a lot of development on the Debian Installer, resulting
in improved hardware support and other new features.

In some cases, a successful installation can still have display issues
when rebooting into the installed system; for those cases there are a
few workarounds [7] that might help log in anyway. There is also an
isenkram-based procedure [7] which lets users detect and fix missing
firmware on their systems, in an automated fashion. Of course, one has
to weigh the pros and cons of using that tool since it's very likely
that it will need to install non-free packages.

    7:
https://www.debian.org/releases/bullseye/amd64/ch06s04#co...

In addition to this, the non-free installer images that include firmware
packages [8] have been improved so that they can anticipate the need for
firmware in the installed system (e.g. firmware for AMD or Nvidia
graphics cards, or newer generations of Intel audio hardware).

    8:
https://cdimage.debian.org/cdimage/unofficial/non-free/cd...

For cloud users, Debian offers direct support for many of the best-known
cloud platforms. Official Debian images are easily selected through each
image marketplace. Debian also publishes pre-built OpenStack images [9]
for the amd64 and arm64 architectures, ready to download and use in
local cloud setups.

    9: https://cloud.debian.org/images/openstack/current/

Debian can now be installed in 76 languages, with most of them available
in both text-based and graphical user interfaces.

The installation images may be downloaded right now via bittorrent [10]
(the recommended method), jigdo [11], or HTTP [12]; see Debian on
CDs [13] for further information. "bullseye" will soon be available on
physical DVD, CD-ROM, and Blu-ray Discs from numerous vendors [14] too.

   10: https://www.debian.org/CD/torrent-cd/
   11: https://www.debian.org/CD/jigdo-cd/#which
   12: https://www.debian.org/CD/http-ftp/
   13: https://www.debian.org/CD/
   14: https://www.debian.org/CD/vendors

Upgrades to Debian 11 from the previous release, Debian 10 (code name
"buster") are automatically handled by the APT package management tool
for most configurations.

For bullseye, the security suite is now named bullseye-security and
users should adapt their APT source-list files accordingly when
upgrading. If your APT configuration also involves pinning or
APT::Default-Release, it is likely to require adjustments too. See the
Changed security archive layout [15] section of the release notes for
more details.

   15:
https://www.debian.org/releases/bullseye/amd64/release-no...

If you are upgrading remotely, be aware of the section No new SSH
connections possible during upgrade [16].

   16:
https://www.debian.org/releases/bullseye/amd64/release-no...

As always, Debian systems may be upgraded painlessly, in place, without
any forced downtime, but it is strongly recommended to read the release
notes [17] as well as the installation guide [18] for possible issues,
and for detailed instructions on installing and upgrading. The release
notes will be further improved and translated to additional languages in
the weeks after the release.

   17: https://www.debian.org/releases/bullseye/releasenotes
   18: https://www.debian.org/releases/bullseye/installmanual


About Debian
------------

Debian is a free operating system, developed by thousands of volunteers
from all over the world who collaborate via the Internet. The Debian
project's key strengths are its volunteer base, its dedication to the
Debian Social Contract and Free Software, and its commitment to provide
the best operating system possible. This new release is another
important step in that direction.


Contact Information
-------------------

For further information, please visit the Debian web pages at
https://www.debian.org/ or send mail to <press@debian.org>.



to post comments

Debian 11 "bullseye" released

Posted Aug 14, 2021 22:40 UTC (Sat) by donbarry (guest, #10485) [Link]

Congratulations, Debian, well done!

Debian 11 "bullseye" released

Posted Aug 15, 2021 4:42 UTC (Sun) by Cyberax (✭ supporter ✭, #52523) [Link]

Slow but steady!

Debian 11 "bullseye" released

Posted Aug 15, 2021 8:39 UTC (Sun) by alspnost (guest, #2763) [Link]

Excellent news - well done, team Debian. We've already been testing this on a couple of servers, and it's obviously as solid always, so we can now roll it out further. I still use Mint on some systems, so I'm already looking forward to LMDE5, which will be based on bullseye but with some additional goodies.

Debian 11 "bullseye" released

Posted Aug 15, 2021 19:26 UTC (Sun) by tuna (guest, #44480) [Link] (10 responses)

I do not understand why Debian does not release the latest upstream Linux. Upstream promises no regressions and Debian should not be concerned about closed source drivers. But maybe old habits are hard to change...

Debian 11 "bullseye" released

Posted Aug 15, 2021 19:52 UTC (Sun) by Vipketsh (guest, #134480) [Link]

It would be better said that upstream promises to fix regressions. Despite all best intentions regressions still happen and when/if they do happen it affects users. This user, at least, appreciates the efforts of Debian in this regard.

Debian 11 "bullseye" released

Posted Aug 15, 2021 20:28 UTC (Sun) by dvdeug (guest, #10998) [Link] (1 responses)

https://www.debian.org/doc/manuals/debian-kernel-handbook... shows the simple steps to install an upstream kernel. If you must have a Debian package, unstable will generally have one. It's one of the easiest packages to keep current in Debian, as it does promise no regressions and doesn't depend on a web of complex libraries.

Debian 11 "bullseye" released

Posted Aug 15, 2021 23:32 UTC (Sun) by dskoll (subscriber, #1630) [Link]

I have a little shell script that builds me debs of the latest upstream kernel. If anyone wants it, here it is with no warranty whatsoever.

build-kernel-pkgs builds the debs and get-latest-linux-kernel-info.pl is a helper script that gets the latest stable Linux kernel version.

Debian 11 "bullseye" released

Posted Aug 15, 2021 21:20 UTC (Sun) by rodgerd (guest, #58896) [Link] (5 responses)

Upstream routinely deliberately creates regressions, like disabling functionality to continue their pathetic war with Sun, a company that ceased to exist more than a decade ago.

Debian 11 "bullseye" released

Posted Aug 16, 2021 0:46 UTC (Mon) by dvdeug (guest, #10998) [Link] (2 responses)

Grumpy about something? You've phrased that in a way that I don't know what you're talking about, but I'm automatically inclined to doubt it. Do you wish to restate that in more specific and clear form?

Debian 11 "bullseye" released

Posted Aug 16, 2021 3:39 UTC (Mon) by cesarb (subscriber, #6266) [Link]

Given the mention of Sun, my guess is that it's a complaint about the "no regressions" policy applying only to user space, but not to the kernel API used by out-of-tree modules like ZFS.

Debian 11 "bullseye" released

Posted Aug 16, 2021 3:45 UTC (Mon) by jkingweb (subscriber, #113039) [Link]

I'd guess it's a reference to GPL-only exports making life more difficult for OpenZFS. Not that there's actually a war on, with Sun's corpse or anyone else, nor that OpenZFS actually has anything currently to do with Sun, either.

Debian 11 "bullseye" released

Posted Aug 16, 2021 11:34 UTC (Mon) by clump (subscriber, #27801) [Link]

Your criticism, if it's about the CDDL, should be directed at Oracle.

Debian 11 "bullseye" released

Posted Aug 18, 2021 18:13 UTC (Wed) by flussence (guest, #85566) [Link]

Even nvidia fanboys aren't this rabid.

Debian 11 "bullseye" released

Posted Aug 24, 2021 2:10 UTC (Tue) by ras (subscriber, #33059) [Link]

> I do not understand why Debian does not release the latest upstream Linux.

Debian does release the lastest upstream kernels for stable. They are available in the backports repository. I occasionally use them.

And having used them - I can confirm they are not regression-less as their makers might hope.

Debian 11 "bullseye" released

Posted Aug 16, 2021 9:12 UTC (Mon) by cyperpunks (subscriber, #39406) [Link] (4 responses)

> For cloud users, Debian offers direct support for many of the best-known
> cloud platforms. Official Debian images are easily selected through each
> image marketplace. Debian also publishes pre-built OpenStack images [9]
> for the amd64 and arm64 architectures, ready to download and use in
> local cloud setups.
>
> 9: https://cloud.debian.org/images/openstack/current/

There are no Debian 11 images at this location.

Debian 11 "bullseye" released

Posted Aug 16, 2021 11:27 UTC (Mon) by amacater (subscriber, #790) [Link] (3 responses)

https://cloud.debian.org/images/bullseye/ may well work. Just raised it on IRC and was given this link.

Debian 11 "bullseye" released

Posted Aug 16, 2021 11:34 UTC (Mon) by Gerardo (subscriber, #37539) [Link] (1 responses)

Debian 11 "bullseye" released

Posted Aug 16, 2021 14:03 UTC (Mon) by cyperpunks (subscriber, #39406) [Link]

Thanks, the generic images worked fine.

Debian 11 "bullseye" released

Posted Aug 16, 2021 11:39 UTC (Mon) by amacater (subscriber, #790) [Link]

CORRECTED URL - https://cloud.debian.org/images/bullseye/

Sorry for mistakes

Debian 11 "bullseye" released

Posted Aug 16, 2021 14:58 UTC (Mon) by mbarnes (guest, #42004) [Link] (7 responses)

Seems like some steps got missed in the release process.

For one thing, the packages website still shows "buster" as stable.

I've always preferred my "/etc/apt/sources.list" to use "stable" rather than release code names, so upon a major release I can just "apt update; apt dist-upgrade". This time, however, after I thought I had upgraded and rebooted I still found myself with a 4.19 kernel. Had to s/stable/bullseye/ in sources.list for things to work properly.

Got it sorted, but as far as I can remember it's the first time a Debian upgrade didn't go smoothly in my 20-ish years as a user.

Debian 11 "bullseye" released

Posted Aug 16, 2021 16:15 UTC (Mon) by pabs (subscriber, #43278) [Link] (5 responses)

The packages site is full of hardcoding, it will get fixed at some point:

https://wiki.debian.org/SuitesAndReposExtension#packages....
https://bugs.debian.org/992258

It sounds like you may not have seen the prompt from `apt update` notifying you of the codename change for the stable suite. With apt there is an interactive prompt asking you to ack the change. With apt-get there is just an error and an option to ack the change.

Debian 11 "bullseye" released

Posted Aug 16, 2021 16:20 UTC (Mon) by mbarnes (guest, #42004) [Link]

You're probably right. I'm still training my fingers to type apt instead of apt-get.

Debian 11 "bullseye" released

Posted Aug 17, 2021 15:17 UTC (Tue) by clump (subscriber, #27801) [Link] (3 responses)

Debian old-timer that typically puts "stable" in /etc/apt/sources.list here. I didn't receive a prompt when running either `apt` or `apt-get` with an unmodified sources.list on a new Debian 10 install. Did I misunderstand your comment?

Debian 11 "bullseye" released

Posted Aug 17, 2021 16:50 UTC (Tue) by docontra (guest, #153758) [Link] (1 responses)

If sources.list is *unmodified from the installation* (using an official installer image), it should use release codenames (i.e., buster for Debian 10) for stable releases and late testing images instead of stable/testing. In that case, you wouldn't get that message. On the machines I manage that I've yet to migrate to Debian 11 I didn't get any notification, but I did get a similar notification stating that bullseye had become the stable release. Personally, I prefer to keep the distro codenames in sources.list instead of using stable to ensure the distro version upgrade is on my terms (regarding timing), but to each their own :)

PD: Note that the security repo has migrated on debian 11 from stable/updates to stable-security ; luckily for me, on all the machines I've upgraded so far that was the biggest hurdle.

Debian 11 "bullseye" released

Posted Aug 18, 2021 1:26 UTC (Wed) by pabs (subscriber, #43278) [Link]

Please note that if you have default-release or pinning setup, you will need to adjust your config to account for the new security suite name:

https://www.debian.org/releases/bullseye/amd64/release-no...

If your APT configuration also involves pinning or APT::Default-Release, it is likely to require adjustments as the codename of the security archive no longer matches that of the regular archive. An example of a working APT::Default-Release line for bullseye looks like:

APT::Default-Release "/^bullseye(|-security|-updates)$/";

which takes advantage of the undocumented feature of APT that it supports regular expressions (inside /).

Debian 11 "bullseye" released

Posted Aug 18, 2021 1:23 UTC (Wed) by pabs (subscriber, #43278) [Link]

If you really had stable (instead of buster) in your sources.list (new installs usually get buster not stable), then when Debian released bullseye, apt/apt-get update gives an error due to stable changing from buster to bullseye, and that might not be what you expected. With apt you get an interactive prompt that lets you ack these changes, with apt-get you just get an error and can't update until you pass the --allow-releaseinfo-change option.

Debian 11 "bullseye" released - use of "stable" in release name for /etc/apt/sources.list

Posted Aug 16, 2021 17:02 UTC (Mon) by amacater (subscriber, #790) [Link]

This is not recommended now: it does cause a massive flag day when releases change. If you hard code the release code name, it will follow all through from unstable -> testing -> stable -> oldstable -> oldoldstable for 5+ years support. It also does mitigate against
links not catching up, too.

Debian 11 "bullseye" released

Posted Aug 16, 2021 16:26 UTC (Mon) by ccchips (subscriber, #3222) [Link]

Congratulations! I put this on a VartualBox for testing and it's doing very well. I used netinst.

Debian 11 "bullseye" released

Posted Aug 18, 2021 18:48 UTC (Wed) by Hobart (subscriber, #59974) [Link]

Pros: A working desktop with NO listening TCP services and only Avahi listening on UDP by default.

Cons: vmwgfx + Wayland (with or without acceleration) freezes the UI without even MagicSysRq able to recover. ¯\_(ツ)_/¯

Debian 11 "bullseye" released

Posted Aug 24, 2021 18:47 UTC (Tue) by flussence (guest, #85566) [Link]

Thanks, Debian.

This week I was given the task of putting Ubuntu on someone's stereotypically underspecced mid-2000s Windows Vista laptop. Ubuntu swapped itself to death in the installer, so I plugged in an ethernet cable, netbooted the Debian installer and an hour later it was running this with Xfce instead. It boots to desktop pretty fast considering, even if the apps run like molasses. Hopefully that'll be enough to keep it out of e-waste for a few more years.


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