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I told it to power off. It rebooted to do updates. Once these updates were done, it powered off. Kinda like Windows. 😂
I told it to power off. It rebooted to do updates. Once these updates were done, it powered off. Kinda like Windows. 😂
Debian getting an update? What wizardry is this? Oh wait it still has a 9 year old version of sqlite.
It’s what pisses me off the most using Debian.
Set a active directory server with samba on Debian and one day windows 11 machines couldn’t login anymore.
After hours of troubleshooting:
Honestly I have patched a few debian packages manually before. Sqlite in particular - I needed a new trigger feature so I built the damn thing from scratch and installed it.
I think doing that probably caused some debian dev to literally die.
https://packages.debian.org/bookworm/sqlite3
https://www.sqlite.org/releaselog/3_40_1.html
TIL 2022 was 9 years ago
I know you’re joking but the fact that 2022 was 6 years ago is crazy to me. It don’t feel like that at all
2022-12-28 is actually about 2.6 years ago.
Shit, wrong timeline. I knew something felt off. Welp, back to the time machine…
And that’s for bookworm, which was released in June 2023.
Trixie currently has, and will likely have, sqlite3 3.46.1, which was released 2024-08-13.
Yeah, and I use trixie myself, but I think that it’s reasonable to use Debian stable rather than Debian testing in response, because for Debian, “release” is when it enters stable.
It is true that trixie is expected to become new stable within about two weeks, so we’re right on the verge of a new release, but it still isn’t out the door.
Debian has a major release once every 2 years or so. That is when packages get major version bumps. Until then the stable version only gets security and stability updates.