Just want to make sure I understand this correctly. Wheezy is Debian testing, so if you have the "testing" repo in your sources.list file, you will track the rolling release of Wheezy as all the updates come through during the development process. Unless you change your sources to "wheezy", after the release of Wheezy, you'll then continue to track the next testing.
I understand that having "wheezy" in apt.sources means "testing" now (though frozen) and then "stable" one Wheezy goes stable. To keep a "rolling" release, "wheezy" can be changed to "testing" so that it does not go "stable"."testing" is now frozen, so at this point, wheezy = testing?
CrunchBang, a Linux distribution based on Debian and powered by the lightweight Openbox window manager, designed especially for low-end machines, is now at version 11 R20120924. CrunchBang 11 R20120924 distribution, codenamed "Waldorf," is based on Wheezy sources, which is the testing branch of Debian. This means that changes, bugs and breakages are expected.
CrunchBang, a Linux distribution based on Debian and powered by the lightweight Openbox window manager, designed especially for low-end machines, is now at version 11 R20120924.
CrunchBang 11 R20121015 distribution, codenamed "Waldorf," is based on Wheezy sources, which is the testing branch of Debian.
CrunchBang, a Linux distribution based on Debian and powered by the lightweight Openbox window manager, designed especially for low-end machines, is now at version 11 R20130119.
CrunchBang 11 R20130119 distribution, codenamed "Waldorf," is based on Wheezy sources, which is the testing branch of Debian.
Crunchbang Waldorf is already released based on Debian Wheezy. You have nothing to worry about if your sources pin to Waldorf what is the default.Debian Testing is now Jessie. Your dist-upgrade depends on if you are running Waldorf or Testing, in both cases you should upgrade to stay current.
I am trying to build dwm from source.
Grabbing the source doesn't work:
(28) $ apt-get source dwm
Reading package lists... Done
Building dependency tree
Reading state information...
Forgive this potentially n00b question :) Want to make sure I understand things correctly.#! (Statler/Waldorf) is based on Debian. It IS Debian in fact.
hey all. i'm new to the forums though not to the #!'ers on irc who know me as 'bluejeans' /me pauses to say hi to everbody..