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Debian Trixie is hard frozen

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57 points by p4bl0 7 months ago · 9 comments

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teleforce 7 months ago

For me the most important new things on Debian Trixie are the Linux kernel supports.

First is the use of 6.12 where the kernel now starts to have real-time capability that was more than 20 years in the making "so now you can run your space laser or audio production without specialty patches" [1].

Second is the official support for RISC-V64 on Debian Trixie [2].

[1] Real-time Linux is officially part of the kernel (138 comments):

https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=41594862

[2] What's new in Debian 13:

https://www.debian.org/releases/trixie/release-notes/whats-n...

  • rcarmo 7 months ago

    I started upgrading my bookworm machines to it to use the updated podman, and it’s been issue-free so far.

    • npodbielski 7 months ago

      Yes, Podman 5 seems really nice tool and seems like the only official way to get it on Debian is to use trixie.

joshka 7 months ago

Looks like Rust 1.85 made it in[1]. So that's good news for packages that keep their MSRV at 1.63 only for compatibility with Debian stable releases.

[1]: https://www.debian.org/releases/trixie/release-notes/whats-n...

lousken 7 months ago

is who command still broken because of systemd?

  • pabs3 7 months ago

    Yes, it is still broken, but it isn't because of systemd, its because of the year 2038 not being representable within the utmp file format, so Debian is migrating away from that, but the migration is not yet complete.

  • hedora 7 months ago

    Interestingly, it’s also broken under devuan. I wonder what the backstory is.

  • yjftsjthsd-h 7 months ago

    What's broken? Running `who` seems to work for me?

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