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This document originated as a "quick reference" but it grew. Nevertheless, Keep It Short and Simple (KISS) is my guiding principle.
This Debian Quick Reference provides information through short
bash
shell commands.
Reference to:
a UNIX-style manual page is given in the form:
bash(1)
.
a GNU TEXINFO page is given in the form: info libc.
Debian maintains three different distributions simultaneously. These are:
stable — Most useful for a production server since it is only updated with security fixes.
testing — The preferred distribution for a workstation since it contains recent releases of desktop software which have received a bit of testing.
unstable — Cutting edge. The choice of Debian developers.
When packages in unstable have no release-critical (RC) bugs filed against them after the first week or so, they are automatically promoted to testing.
Debian distributions also have code names. Before Sarge was released in June 2005, the three distributions were Woody (stable), Sarge (testing), and Sid (unstable). After Sarge was released the three distributions were, respectively, Sarge, Etch, and Sid. When Etch is released, the stable and unstable distributions will be Etch and Sid; a new testing distribution will then be created (initially as a copy of stable) and given a new code name.
Subscribe to the low-volume mailing list [email protected] for important announcements about Debian.
If you want to use versions of packages that are more current than the versions that were released with the distribution you are using, then you can either upgrade to a later distribution as described in Upgrading a distribution to stable, testing, or unstable, Chapter 2, or you can upgrade only selected packages. If the package can't be upgraded easily then you may want to backport it as described in Port a package to the stable system, Section 3.4.10.
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Debian Quick Reference
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