From 7a1dd3850e8b088ac4ec7dcb3cb92eceab058027 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: hertzog Date: Wed, 12 Oct 2011 07:50:37 +0000 Subject: [PATCH] Refresh some release-specific information. Closes: #643931 Based on a patch by Luca Falavigna. git-svn-id: svn://anonscm.debian.org/ddp/manuals/trunk/developers-reference@8942 313b444b-1b9f-4f58-a734-7bb04f332e8d --- common.ent | 4 ++-- debian/changelog | 2 ++ resources.dbk | 16 ++++++++-------- 3 files changed, 12 insertions(+), 10 deletions(-) diff --git a/common.ent b/common.ent index be67fce..5687224 100644 --- a/common.ent +++ b/common.ent @@ -10,10 +10,10 @@ - + - + Tue, 06 Sep 2011 09:19:21 +0200 diff --git a/resources.dbk b/resources.dbk index e577d67..fbe53c7 100644 --- a/resources.dbk +++ b/resources.dbk @@ -534,12 +534,12 @@ Debian decided to build some ports based on other Unix kernels, like architectures. Debian 2.1 shipped for the i386, m68k, alpha, and sparc architectures. Since then Debian has grown hugely. -Debian 5 supports a total of twelve architectures: alpha, -amd64, arm, -armel, hppa, -i386, ia64, mips, +Debian 6 supports a total of nine Linux architectures (amd64, +armel, i386, +ia64, mips, mipsel, powerpc, -s390, sparc. +s390, sparc) and two kFreeBSD architectures +(kfreebsd-i386 and kfreebsd-amd64). Information for developers and users about the specific ports are available at @@ -669,8 +669,8 @@ additions to stable in the proposed-updates directory. Those packages in proposed-updates that pass muster are periodically moved as a batch into the stable distribution and the revision level of the stable -distribution is incremented (e.g., ‘3.0’ becomes ‘3.0r1’, ‘2.2r4’ -becomes ‘2.2r5’, and so forth). Please refer to +distribution is incremented (e.g., ‘6.0’ becomes ‘6.0.1’, ‘5.0.7’ +becomes ‘5.0.8’, and so forth). Please refer to uploads to the stable distribution for details. @@ -763,7 +763,7 @@ Debian 1.3, bo; Debian 2.0, hamm; Debian 2.1, slink; Debian 2.2, potato; Debian 3.0, woody; Debian 3.1, sarge; Debian 4.0, etch; Debian 5.0, lenny -and the next release will be called squeeze. +and the next release will be called wheezy. There is also a ``pseudo-distribution'', called sid, which is the current unstable distribution; since packages are moved from unstable to -- 2.30.2