Debian Wheezy Version
Debian 9 (Stretch) uses GNOME version 3.22 by default | |
Developer | The Debian Project |
---|---|
OS family | Linux |
Working state | Current |
Source model | Open source |
Initial release | September 1993; 26 years ago |
Latest release | 10.1 (Buster)[1](September 7, 2019; 25 days ago)[±] |
Latest preview | 11 (Bullseye) |
Repository | |
Available in | 75 languages |
Update method | Long-term support |
Package manager | APT (front-end), dpkg |
Platforms | x86-64, arm64, armel, armhf, i386, mips, mipsel, mips64el, ppc64el, s390x,[2]riscv64 (in progress)[3] |
Kernel type | Monolithic (Linux) |
Userland | GNU |
Default user interface |
|
License | DFSG-compatible licenses |
Official website | www.debian.org |
- Debian 7 Wheezy Kernel Version
- Debian Wheezy Python Version
- Debian Wheezy Download
- Debian Wheezy Raspberry Pi
- Debian Wheezy Release Notes
- Ubuntu Wheezy
- Debian Wheezy Apache Version
Debian Long Term Support. Debian Long Term Support (LTS) is a project to extend the lifetime of all Debian stable releases to (at least) 5 years. Debian LTS will not be handled by the Debian security team, but by a separate group of volunteers and companies interested in making it a success. It's OK to download 64 bit version commonly. But if your computer is old and not supported 64 bit computing, download 32 bit version. The example on this site uses 64 bit version of Debian 7.0. Debian Linux with a code name 'Jessie' is the latest stable Debian release which succeeds previous stable version 'Wheezy'. It is important to point out that nothing is bulletproof and proper failover procedure should be discussed before the upgrade takes place.
- Debian releases and names Posted in Linux/Unix/BSD - Last updated Feb. Debian releases are named after characters from Toy Story and are frequently referred to with the name rather than the version. This post is for my own quick reference for the version-to-name of each Debian release. Debian version names.
- Debian 9 (Stretch) was released on 17 June 2017, two years and two months after Debian 8.0, and contained more than 51,000 packages. The latest minor update, called a 'point release', is version 9.11, 37 released on September 8, 2019; 20 days ago ( 2019-09-08 ).
- How to install/setup latest version of PHP 5.5 on Debian Wheezy 7.0/7.1/7.2 (and how to fix the GPG key error) Previous Next. Please note: This works fine.
- After a Debian version has reached EOL (end of life), its repositories go to the Debian archive. Therefore we can use this archive to get packags for our distribution. The syntax for our /etc/apt/sources.list is as follows.
Debian (/ˈdɛbiən/),[4][5] also known as Debian GNU/Linux, is a Linux distribution composed of free and open-source software, developed by the community-supported Debian Project, which was established by Ian Murdock on August 16, 1993. The first version, Debian 0.01, was released on September 15, 1993,[6] and the first stable version, 1.1, was released on June 17, 1996.[7] The Debian Stable branch is the most popular edition for personal computers and servers, and is the basis for many other distributions.
Debian is one of the oldest operating systems based on the Linux kernel. The project is coordinated over the Internet by a team of volunteers guided by the Debian Project Leader and three foundational documents: the Debian Social Contract, the Debian Constitution, and the Debian Free Software Guidelines. New distributions are updated continually, and the next candidate is released after a time-based freeze.
Since its founding, Debian has been developed openly and distributed freely according to the principles of the GNU Project. Because of this, the Free Software Foundation sponsored the project from November 1994 to November 1995. When the sponsorship ended, the Debian Project formed the nonprofit organizationSoftware in the Public Interest to continue financially supporting development.
- 1Features
- 2Installation
- 3History
- 4Packages
- 5Branches
- 8Hardware support
- 8.2Architecture ports
- 9Organization
- 10Development
- 10.2Security
Features[edit]
Debian has access to online repositories that contain over 51,000 packages.[8] Debian officially contains only free software, but non-free software can be downloaded and installed from the Debian repositories.[9] Debian includes popular free programs such as LibreOffice,[10]Firefox web browser, Evolution mail, K3b disc burner, VLC media player, GIMP image editor, and Evince document viewer.[9] Debian is a popular choice for servers, for example as the operating system component of a LAMP stack.[11][12]
Kernels[edit]
Several flavors of the Linux kernel exist for each port. For example, the i386 port has flavors for IA-32 PCs supporting Physical Address Extension and real-time computing, for older PCs, and for x86-64 PCs.[13] The Linux kernel does not officially contain firmware without sources, although such firmware is available in non-free packages and alternative installation media.[14][15]
Desktop environments[edit]
Debian offers CD images specifically built for Xfce, the default desktop on CD, and DVD images for GNOME, KDE and others.[16]MATE is officially supported,[17] while Cinnamon support was added with Debian 8.0 Jessie.[18] Less common window managers such as Enlightenment, Openbox, Fluxbox, IceWM, Window Maker and others are available.[19]
The default desktop environment of version 7.0 Wheezy was temporarily switched to Xfce, because GNOME 3 did not fit on the first CD of the set.[20] The default for the version 8.0 Jessie was changed again to Xfce in November 2013,[21] and back to GNOME in September 2014.[22]
Localization[edit]
Several parts of Debian are translated into languages other than American English, including package descriptions, configuration messages, documentation and the website.[23] The level of software localization depends on the language, ranging from the highly supported German and French to the barely translated Creek and Samoan.[24] The Debian 10 installer is available in 76 languages.[25]
Installation[edit]
Debian offers DVD and CD images for installation that can be downloaded using BitTorrent or jigdo. Physical disks can also be bought from retailers.[26] The full sets are made up of several discs (the amd64 port consists of 13 DVDs or 84 CDs),[27] but only the first disc is required for installation, as the installer can retrieve software not contained in the first disc image from online repositories.[28]
Debian offers different network installation methods. A minimal install of Debian is available via the netinst CD, whereby Debian is installed with just a base and later added software can be downloaded from the Internet. Another option is to boot the installer from the network.[29]
Installation images are hybrid on some architectures and can be used to create a bootable USB drive (Live USB).[30]
The default bootstrap loader is GNU GRUB version 2, though the package name is simply grub, while version 1 was renamed to grub-legacy. This conflicts with e.g. Fedora, where grub version 2 is named grub2.
The default desktop may be chosen from the DVD boot menu among GNOME, KDE Plasma, Xfce and LXDE, and from special disc 1 CDs.[31][32]
Live images[edit]
Debian releases live install images for CDs, DVDs and USB thumb drives, for IA-32 and x86-64 architectures, and with a choice of desktop environments. These Debian Live images allow users to boot from removable media and run Debian without affecting the contents of their computer.
A full install of Debian to the computer's hard drive can be initiated from the live image environment.[33]
Personalized images can be built with the live-build tool for discs, USB drives and for network booting purposes.[34]
History[edit]
Founding (1993–1998)[edit]
Debian was first announced on August 16, 1993, by Ian Murdock, who initially called the system 'the Debian Linux Release'.[35][36] The word 'Debian' was formed as a portmanteau of the first name of his then-girlfriend (later ex-wife) Debra Lynn and his own first name.[37] Before Debian's release, the Softlanding Linux System (SLS) had been a popular Linux distribution and the basis for Slackware.[38] The perceived poor maintenance and prevalence of bugs in SLS motivated Murdock to launch a new distribution.[39]
Debian 0.01, released on September 15, 1993, was the first of several internal releases.[6] Version 0.90 was the first public release,[6] providing support through mailing lists hosted at Pixar.[40] The release included the Debian Linux Manifesto, outlining Murdock's view for the new operating system. In it he called for the creation of a distribution to be maintained openly, in the spirit of Linux and GNU.[41]
The Debian project released the 0.9x versions in 1994 and 1995.[42] During this time it was sponsored by the Free Software Foundation for one year.[43] Ian Murdock delegated the base system, the core packages of Debian, to Bruce Perens and Murdock focused on the management of the growing project.[39] The first ports to non-IA-32 architectures began in 1995, and Debian 1.1 was released in 1996.[44] By that time and thanks to Ian Jackson, the dpkg package manager was already an essential part of Debian.[45]
In 1996, Bruce Perens assumed the project leadership. Perens was a controversial leader, regarded as authoritarian and strongly attached to Debian.[46] He drafted a social contract and edited suggestions from a month-long discussion into the Debian Social Contract and the Debian Free Software Guidelines.[47] After the FSF withdrew their sponsorship in the midst of the free software vs. open source debate,[48] Perens initiated the creation of the legal umbrella organizationSoftware in the Public Interest instead of seeking renewed involvement with the FSF.[44] He led the conversion of the project from a.out to ELF.[39] He created the BusyBox program to make it possible to run a Debian installer on a single floppy, and wrote a new installer.[49] By the time Debian 1.2 was released, the project had grown to nearly two hundred volunteers.[39] Perens left the project in 1998.[50]
Ian Jackson became the leader in 1998.[51] Debian 2.0 introduced the second official port, m68k.[42] During this time the first port to a non-Linux kernel, Debian GNU/Hurd, was started.[52] On December 2, the first Debian Constitution was ratified.[53]
Leader election (1999–2005)[edit]
From 1999, the project leader was elected yearly.[54] The Advanced Packaging Tool was deployed with Debian 2.1.[42] The amount of applicants was overwhelming and the project established the new member process.[55][56] The first Debian derivatives, namely Libranet,[57]Corel Linux and Stormix's Storm Linux, were started in 1999.[44] The 2.2 release in 2000 was dedicated to Joel Klecker, a developer who died of Duchenne muscular dystrophy.[58]
In late 2000, the project reorganized the archive with new package 'pools' and created the Testing distribution, made up of packages considered stable, to reduce the freeze for the next release.[44] In the same year, developers began holding an annual conference called DebConf with talks and workshops for developers and technical users.[59] In May 2001, Hewlett-Packard announced plans to base its Linux development on Debian.[60]
In July 2002, the project released version 3.0, code-named Woody, the first release to include cryptographic software, a free licensed KDE and internationalization.[61] During these last release cycles, the Debian project drew considerable criticism from the free software community because of the long time between stable releases.[62][63][64]
Some events disturbed the project while working on Sarge, as Debian servers were attacked by fire and hackers.[44][65] One of the most memorable was the Vancouver prospectus.[66][67][68] After a meeting held in Vancouver, release manager Steve Langasek announced a plan to reduce the number of supported ports to four in order to shorten future release cycles.[69] There was a large reaction because the proposal looked more like a decision and because such a drop would damage Debian's aim to be 'the universal operating system'.[70][71][72]
Sarge and later releases (2005–present)[edit]
The 3.1 Sarge release was made in June 2005. This release updated 73% of the software and included over 9,000 new packages. A new installer with a modular design, Debian-Installer, allowed installations with RAID, XFS and LVM support, improved hardware detection, made installations easier for novice users, and was translated into almost forty languages. An installation manual and release notes were in ten and fifteen languages respectively. The efforts of Skolelinux, Debian-Med and Debian-Accessibility raised the number of packages that were educational, had a medical affiliation, and ones made for people with disabilities.[44][73]
In 2006, as a result of a much-publicized dispute, Mozilla software was rebranded in Debian, with Firefox forked as Iceweasel and Thunderbird as Icedove. The Mozilla Corporation stated that software with unapproved modifications could not be distributed under the Firefox trademark. Two reasons that Debian modifies the Firefox software are to change the non-free artwork and to provide security patches.[74][75] In February 2016, it was announced that Mozilla and Debian had reached an agreement and Iceweasel would revert to the name Firefox; similar agreement was anticipated for Icedove/Thunderbird.[76]
A fund-raising experiment, Dunc-Tank, was created to solve the release cycle problem and release managers were paid to work full-time;[77] in response, unpaid developers slowed down their work and the release was delayed.[78] Debian 4.0 (Etch) was released in April 2007, featuring the x86-64 port and a graphical installer.[42] Debian 5.0 (Lenny) was released in February 2009, supporting Marvell's Orion platform and netbooks such as the Asus Eee PC.[79] The release was dedicated to Thiemo Seufer, a developer who died in a car crash.[80]
In July 2009, the policy of time-based development freezes on a two-year cycle was announced. Time-based freezes are intended to blend the predictability of time based releases with Debian's policy of feature based releases, and to reduce overall freeze time.[81] The Squeeze cycle was going to be especially short; however, this initial schedule was abandoned.[82] In September 2010, the backports service became official, providing more recent versions of some software for the stable release.[83]
Debian 6.0 (Squeeze) was released in February 2011, introduced Debian GNU/kFreeBSD as a technology preview, featured a dependency-based boot system, and moved problematic firmware to the non-free area.[16] Debian 7.0 (Wheezy) was released in May 2013, featuring multiarch support[84] and Debian 8.0 (Jessie) was released in April 2015, using systemd as the new init system.[85] Debian 9.0 (Stretch) was released in June 2017.[86][87] Debian 10.0 (Buster) was released in July 2019.[88] Debian is still in development and new packages are uploaded to unstable every day.[89]
Throughout Debian's lifetime, both the Debian distribution and its website have won various awards from different organizations,[90] including Server Distribution of the Year 2011,[91]The best Linux distro of 2011,[92] and a Best of the Net award for October 1998.[93]
On December 2, 2015, Microsoft announced that they would offer Debian GNU/Linux as an endorsed distribution on the Azure cloud platform.[94][95]
Microsoft has also added a user environment to their desktop operating system Windows 10 called Windows Subsystem for Linux that offers a Debian subset.
Packages[edit]
Package management operations can be performed with different tools available on Debian, from the lowest level command dpkg to graphical front-ends like Synaptic. The recommended standard for administering packages on a Debian system is the apt toolset.[96]
dpkg provides the low-level infrastructure for package management.[97] The dpkg database contains the list of installed software on the current system. The dpkg command tool does not know about repositories. The command can work with local .deb package files, and information from the dpkg database.[98]
APT tools[edit]
An Advanced Packaging Tool (APT) tool allows administering an installed Debian system to retrieve and resolve package dependencies from repositories. APT tools share dependency information and cached packages.[96]
- The apt command itself is intended as an end user interface and enables some options better suited for interactive usage by default compared to more specialized APT tools like apt-get and apt-cache explained below.
- apt-get and apt-cache are command tools of the standard apt package. apt-get installs and removes packages, and apt-cache is used for searching packages and displaying package information.[96]
- Aptitude is a command line tool that also offers a text-based user interface. The program comes with enhancements such as better search on package metadata.[96]
GDebi and other front-ends[edit]
GDebi is an APT tool which can be used in command-line and on the GUI.[99] GDebi can install a local .deb file via the command line like the dpkg command, but with access to repositories to resolve dependencies.[100] Other graphical front-ends for APT include Software Center,[101]Synaptic[102] and Apper.[103]
GNOME Software is a graphical front-end for PackageKit, which itself can work on top of various software packaging systems.
Repositories[edit]
The Debian Free Software Guidelines (DFSG) define the distinctive meaning of the word 'free' as in 'free and open-source software'.[104] Packages that comply with these guidelines, usually under the GNU General Public License, Modified BSD License or Artistic License,[105] are included inside the main area;[106] otherwise, they are included inside the non-free and contrib areas. These last two areas are not distributed within the official installation media, but they can be adopted manually.[104]
Non-free includes packages that do not comply with the DFSG,[107] such as documentation with invariant sections and proprietary software,[108][109] and legally questionable packages.[107] Contrib includes packages which do comply with the DFSG but fail other requirements. For example, they may depend on packages which are in non-free or requires such for building them.[107]
Richard Stallman and the Free Software Foundation have criticized the Debian project for hosting the non-free repository and because the contrib and non-free areas are easily accessible,[110][111] an opinion echoed by some in Debian including the former project leader Wichert Akkerman.[112] The internal dissent in the Debian project regarding the non-free section has persisted,[113] but the last time it came to a vote in 2004, the majority decided to keep it.[114]
Branches[edit]
Three branches of Debian (also called releases, distributions or suites) are regularly maintained:[115]
- Stable is the current release and targets stable and well-tested software needs.[116]Stable is made by freezing Testing for a few months where bugs are fixed and packages with too many bugs are removed; then the resulting system is released as stable. It is updated only if major security or usability fixes are incorporated.[106] This branch has an optional backports service that provides more recent versions of some software.[83]Stable's CDs and DVDs can be found in the Debian website.[27]
- Testing is the preview branch that will eventually become the next major release. The packages included in this branch have had some testing in unstable but they may not be fit for release yet. It contains newer packages than stable but older than unstable. This branch is updated continually until it is frozen.[106]Testing's CDs and DVDs can be found on the Debian website.[27]
- Unstable, always codenamed sid, is the trunk. Packages are accepted without checking the distribution as a whole.[106] This branch is usually run by software developers who participate in a project and need the latest libraries available, and by those who prefer bleeding-edge software.[115] Debian does not provide full Sid installation discs, but rather a minimal ISO that can be used to install over a network connection. Additionally, this branch can be installed through a system upgrade from stable or testing.[117]
Other branches in Debian:
- Oldstable is the prior stable release.[106] It is supported by the Debian Security Team until one year after a new stable is released, and since the release of Debian 6, for another 2 years through the Long Term Support project.[118] Eventually, oldstable is moved to a repository for archived releases.[106]
- Oldoldstable is the prior oldstable release. It is supported by the Long Term Support community. Eventually, oldoldstable is moved to a repository for archived releases.
- Experimental is a temporary staging area of highly experimental software that is likely to break the system. It is not a full distribution and missing dependencies are commonly found in unstable, where new software without the damage chance is normally uploaded.[106]
The snapshot archive provides older versions of the branches. They may be used to install a specific older version of some software.[119]
Numbering scheme[edit]
Stable and oldstable get minor updates, called point releases; as of April 2019, the stable release is version 9.9,[120] released on April 27, 2019; 5 months ago, and the oldstable release is version 8.11.[121]
The numbering scheme for the point releases up to Debian 4.0 was to include the letter r (for revision)[122] after the main version number and then the number of the point release; for example, the latest point release of version 4.0 is 4.0r9.[123] This scheme was chosen because a new dotted version would make the old one look obsolete and vendors would have trouble selling their CDs.[124]
From Debian 5.0, the numbering scheme of point releases was changed, conforming to the GNU version numbering standard;[125] the first point release of Debian 5.0 was 5.0.1 instead of 5.0r1.[126] The numbering scheme was once again changed for the first Debian 7 update, which was version 7.1.[127] The r scheme is no longer in use, but point release announcements include a note about not throwing away old CDs.[128]
Code names[edit]
The code names of Debian releases are names of characters from the Toy Story films.
Debian 8, the old old stable, was named Jessie after the cowgirl in Toy Story 2, Toy Story 3 and Toy Story 4.
Debian 9, the current old stable, was named Stretch after the toy rubber octopus in Toy Story 3.
Debian 10, the current stable, is named Buster,[129] after the pet dachshund in Toy Story.
Debian 11 will be called Bullseye,[130] after Woody's horse.
Debian 12 will be called Bookworm,[131] after the intelligent worm toy with a built-in flash-light seen in Toy Story 3.
The unstable suite is permanently nicknamed Sid, after the emotionally unstable boy next door who regularly destroyed toys, with many of his own toys being either destroyed, have missing pieces, or replaced with parts from other toys.[132]
This naming tradition came about because Bruce Perens was involved in the early development of Debian while working at Pixar.[46]
Blends[edit]
Debian Pure Blends are subsets of a Debian release configured out-of-the-box for users with particular skills and interests.[133] For example, Debian Jr. is made for children, while Debian Science is for researchers and scientists.[134] The complete Debian distribution includes all available Debian Pure Blends.[133] 'Debian Blend' (without 'Pure') is a term for a Debian-based distribution that strives to become part of mainstream Debian, and have its extra features included in future releases.[135]
Logo[edit]
The Debian 'swirl' logo was designed by Raul Silva[136][137] in 1999 as part of a contest to replace the semi-official logo that had been used.[138] The winner of the contest received an @debian.org email address, and a set of Debian 2.1 install CDs for the architecture of their choice. There has been no official statement from the Debian project on the logo's meaning, but at the time of the logo's selection, it was suggested that the logo represented the magic smoke ( or the genie ) that made computers work.[139][140][141]
One theory about the origin of the Debian logo is that Buzz Lightyear, the chosen character for the first named Debian release, has a swirl in his chin.[142][143]Stefano Zacchiroli also suggested that this swirl is the Debian one. Buzz Lightyear's swirl is a more likely candidate as the codenames for Debian are names of Toy Story characters. The developer of Debian also used to work for Pixar.[144]
Multimedia support[edit]
Multimedia support has been problematic in Debian regarding codecs threatened by possible patent infringements, without sources or under too restrictive licenses,[145] and regarding technologies such as Adobe Flash.[79] Even though packages with problems related to their distribution could go into the non-free area, software such as libdvdcss is not hosted at Debian.[146]
A notable third party repository exists, formerly named debian-multimedia.org,[147][148][149] providing software not present in Debian such as Windows codecs, libdvdcss and the Adobe Flash Player.[150] Even though this repository is maintained by Christian Marillat, a Debian developer, it is not part of the project and is not hosted on a Debian server. The repository provides packages already included in Debian, interfering with the official maintenance. Eventually, project leader Stefano Zacchiroli asked Marillat to either settle an agreement about the packaging or to stop using the 'Debian' name.[151] Marillat chose the latter and renamed the repository to deb-multimedia.org. The repository was so popular that the switchover was announced by the official blog of the Debian project.[152]
Hardware support[edit]
Hardware requirements[edit]
Hardware requirements are at least those of the kernel and the GNU toolsets.[153] Debian's recommended system requirements depend on the level of installation, which corresponds to increased numbers of installed components:[154]
Type | Minimum RAM size | Recommended RAM size | Minimum processor clock speed (IA-32) | Hard-drive capacity |
---|---|---|---|---|
Non desktop | 256 MB | 512 MB | 2 GB | |
Desktop | 512 MB | 2 GB | 1 GHz | 10 GB |
The real minimum memory requirements depend on the architecture and may be much less than the numbers listed in this table. It is possible to install Debian with 170 MB of RAM for x86-64;[154] the installer will run in low memory mode and it is recommended to create a swap partition.[31] The installer for z/Architecture requires about 20 MB of RAM, but relies on network hardware.[154][155] Similarly, disk space requirements, which depend on the packages to be installed, can be reduced by manually selecting the packages needed.[154] As of May 2019, no Pure Blend exists that would lower the hardware requirements easily.[156]
It is possible to run graphical user interfaces on older or low-end systems, but the installation of window managers instead of desktop environments is recommended, as desktop environments are more resource intensive. Requirements for individual software vary widely and must be considered, with those of the base operating environment.[154]
Architecture ports[edit]
Official ports[edit]
As of the Stretch release, the official ports are:[157]
- amd64: x86-64 architecture with 64-bit userland and supporting 32-bit software
- arm64: ARMv8-A architecture[158]
- armel: Little-endianARM architecture (ARMv4T instruction set)[159] on various embedded systems (embedded application binary interface (EABI))
- armhf: ARM hard-float architecture (ARMv7 instruction set) requiring hardware with a floating-point unit
- i386: IA-32 architecture with 32-bit userland, compatible with x86-64 machines[153]
- mips: Big-endian MIPS architecture
- mips64el: Little-endian 64 bit MIPS
- mipsel: Little-endian MIPS
- ppc64el: Little-endian PowerPC architecture supporting POWER7+ and POWER8 CPUs[158]
- s390x: z/Architecture with 64-bit userland, intended to replace s390[160]
Unofficial ports[edit]
Unofficial ports are available as part of the unstable distribution:[157]
- alpha: DEC Alpha architecture
- hppa: HP PA-RISC architecture
- hurd-i386: GNU Hurd kernel on IA-32 architecture
- ia64: Intel Itanium
- kfreebsd-amd64: Kernel of FreeBSD on x86-64 architecture
- kfreebsd-i386: Kernel of FreeBSD on IA-32 architecture
- m68k: Motorola 68k architecture on Amiga, Atari, Macintosh and various embedded VME systems
- powerpc: 32-bit PowerPC
- powerpcspe: PowerPCSPE architecture, incompatible with PowerPC
- ppc64: PowerPC64 architecture supporting 64-bit PowerPC CPUs with VMX
- riscv64: 64-bit RISC-V
- sh4: Hitachi SuperH architecture
- sparc64: Sun SPARC architecture with 64-bit userland
- x32: x32 ABI userland for x86-64[161]
Embedded systems[edit]
Debian supports a variety of ARM-based NAS devices. The NSLU2 was supported by the installer in Debian 4.0 and 5.0,[162] and Martin Michlmayr is providing installation tarballs since version 6.0.[163] Other supported NAS devices are the Buffalo Kurobox Pro,[164] GLAN Tank, Thecus N2100[165] and QNAP Turbo Stations.[164]
Devices based on the Kirkwood system on a chip (SoC) are supported too, such as the SheevaPlug plug computer and OpenRD products.[166] There are efforts to run Debian on mobile devices, but this is not a project goal yet since the Debian Linux kernel maintainers would not apply the needed patches.[167] Nevertheless, there are packages for resource-limited systems.[168]
There are efforts to support Debian on wireless access points.[169] Debian is known to run on set-top boxes.[170] Work is ongoing to support the AM335x processor,[171] which is used in electronic point of service solutions.[172] Debian may be customized to run on cash machines.[173]
BeagleBoard, a low-power open-source hardware single-board computer (made by Texas Instruments) has switched to Debian Linux preloaded on its Beaglebone Black board's flash.
Organization[edit]
General Resolution | |||||||||||
elect↓ | override↓ | ||||||||||
Leader | |||||||||||
↓appoint | |||||||||||
Delegate | |||||||||||
↓decide | |||||||||||
Developer | propose↑ |
Debian's policies and team efforts focus on collaborative software development and testing processes.[4] As a result, a new major release tends to occur every two years with revision releases that fix security issues and important problems.[122][81] The Debian project is a volunteer organization with three foundational documents:
- The Debian Social Contract defines a set of basic principles by which the project and its developers conduct affairs.[104]
- The Debian Free Software Guidelines define the criteria for 'free software' and thus what software is permissible in the distribution. These guidelines have been adopted as the basis of the Open Source Definition. Although this document can be considered separate, it formally is part of the Social Contract.[104]
- The Debian Constitution describes the organizational structure for formal decision-making within the project, and enumerates the powers and responsibilities of the Project Leader, the Secretary and other roles.[53]
Historical population | ||
---|---|---|
Year | DD | ±% |
1999 | 347 | — |
2000 | 347 | +0.0% |
2001 | ? | — |
2002 | 939 | — |
2003 | 831 | −11.5% |
2004 | 911 | +9.6% |
2005 | 965 | +5.9% |
2006 | 972 | +0.7% |
2007 | 1,036 | +6.6% |
2008 | 1,075 | +3.8% |
2009 | 1,013 | −5.8% |
2010 | 886 | −12.5% |
2011 | 911 | +2.8% |
2012 | 948 | +4.1% |
2013 | 988 | +4.2% |
2014 | 1,003 | +1.5% |
2015 | 1,033 | +3.0% |
2016 | 1,023 | −1.0% |
2017 | 1,062 | +3.8% |
2018 | 1,001 | −5.7% |
2019 | 1,003 | +0.2% |
Source: Debian Voting Information |
Debian developers are organized in a web of trust.[174] There are at present about one thousand active Debian developers,[175][176] but it is possible to contribute to the project without being an official developer.[177]
The project maintains official mailing lists and conferences for communication and coordination between developers.[106][178] For issues with single packages and other tasks,[179] a public bug tracking system is used by developers and end users. Internet Relay Chat channels (primarily on the Open and Free Technology Community (OFTC) and freenode networks) are also used for communication among developers[106] and to provide real time help.[180]
Debian is supported by donations made to organizations authorized by the leader.[53] The largest supporter is Software in the Public Interest, the owner of the Debian trademark, manager of the monetary donations[181] and umbrella organization for various other community free software projects.[182]
A Project Leader is elected once per year by the developers. The leader has special powers, but they are not absolute, and appoints delegates to perform specialized tasks. Delegates make decisions as they think is best, taking into account technical criteria and consensus. By way of a General Resolution, the developers may recall the leader, reverse a decision made by the leader or a delegate, amend foundational documents and make other binding decisions.[53] The voting method is based on the Schulze method (Cloneproof Schwartz Sequential Dropping).[54]
Project leadership is distributed occasionally. Branden Robinson was helped by the Project Scud, a team of developers that assisted the leader,[184] but there were concerns that such leadership would split Debian into two developer classes.[185] Anthony Towns created a supplemental position, Second In Charge (2IC), that shared some powers of the leader.[186] Steve McIntyre was 2IC and had a 2IC himself.[187]
One important role in Debian's leadership is that of a release manager.[188] The release team sets goals for the next release, supervises the processes and decides when to release. The team is led by the next release managers and stable release managers.[189] Release assistants were introduced in 2003.[190]
Developers[edit]
The Debian Project has an influx of applicants wishing to become developers.[191] These applicants must undergo a vetting process which establishes their identity, motivation, understanding of the project's principles, and technical competence.[192] This process has become much harder throughout the years.[193]
Debian developers join the project for many reasons. Some that have been cited include:
- Debian is their main operating system and they want to promote Debian[194]
- To improve the support for their favorite technology[195]
- They are involved with a Debian derivative[196]
- A desire to contribute back to the free-software community[197]
- To make their Debian maintenance work easier[198]
Debian developers may resign their positions at any time or, when deemed necessary, they can be expelled.[53] Those who follow the retiring protocol are granted the 'emeritus' status and they may regain their membership through a shortened new member process.[199]
Development[edit]
upstream | ||
↓ | packaging | |
package | ||
↓ | upload | |
incoming | ||
↓ | checks | |
unstable | ||
↓ | migration | |
testing | ||
↓ | freeze | |
frozen | ||
↓ | release | |
stable |
Each software package has a maintainer that may be either one person or a team of Debian developers and non-developer maintainers.[200][201] The maintainer keeps track of upstream releases, and ensures that the package coheres with the rest of the distribution and meets the standards of quality of Debian. Packages may include modifications introduced by Debian to achieve compliance with Debian Policy, even to fix non-Debian specific bugs, although coordination with upstream developers is advised.[199]
The maintainer releases a new version by uploading the package to the 'incoming' system, which verifies the integrity of the packages and their digital signatures. If the package is found to be valid, it is installed in the package archive into an area called the 'pool' and distributed every day to hundreds of mirrors worldwide. The upload must be signed using OpenPGP-compatible software.[106] All Debian developers have individual cryptographic key pairs.[202] Developers are responsible for any package they upload even if the packaging was prepared by another contributor.[203]
Initially, an accepted package is only available in the unstable branch.[106] For a package to become a candidate for the next release, it must migrate to the Testing branch by meeting the following:[204]
- It has been in unstable for a certain length of time that depends on the urgency of the changes.
- It does not have 'release-critical' bugs, except for the ones already present in Testing. Release-critical bugs are those considered serious enough that they make the package unsuitable for release.
- There are no outdated versions in unstable for any release ports.
- The migration does not break any packages in Testing.
- Its dependencies can be satisfied by packages already in Testing or by packages being migrated at the same time.
- The migration is not blocked by a freeze.
Thus, a release-critical bug in a new version of a shared library on which many packages depend may prevent those packages from entering Testing, because the updated library must meet the requirements too.[205] From the branch viewpoint, the migration process happens twice per day, rendering Testing in perpetual beta.[106]
Periodically, the release team publishes guidelines to the developers in order to ready the release. A new release occurs after a freeze, when all important software is reasonably up-to-date in the Testing branch and any other significant issues are solved. At that time, all packages in the testing branch become the new stable branch.[106] Although freeze dates are time-based,[81] release dates are not, which are announced by the release managers a couple of weeks beforehand.[206]
A version of a package can belong to more than one branch, usually testing and unstable. It is possible for a package to keep the same version between stable releases and be part of oldstable, stable, testing and unstable at the same time.[207] Each branch can be seen as a collection of pointers into the package 'pool' mentioned above.[106]
Release cycle[edit]
A new stable branch of Debian gets released approximately every 2 years. It will receive official support for about 3 years with update for major security or usability fixes. Point releases will be available every several months as determined by Stable Release Managers (SRM).[208]
Debian also launched its Long Term Support (LTS) project since Debian 6 (Debian Squeeze). For each Debian release, it will receive two years of extra security updates provided by LTS Team after its End Of Life (EOL). However, no point releases will be made. Now each Debian release can receive 5 years of security support in total.[209]
Security[edit]
The Debian project handles security through public disclosure rather than through obscurity. Debian security advisories are compatible with the Common Vulnerabilities and Exposures dictionary, are usually coordinated with other free software vendors and are published the same day a vulnerability is made public.[210][211] There used to be a security audit project that focused on packages in the stable release looking for security bugs;[212] Steve Kemp, who started the project, retired in 2011 but resumed his activities and applied to rejoin in 2014.[213][214]
The stable branch is supported by the Debian security team; oldstable is supported for one year.[118] Although Squeeze is not officially supported, Debian is coordinating an effort to provide long-term support (LTS) until February 2016, five years after the initial release, but only for the IA-32 and x86-64 platforms.[215]Testing is supported by the testing security team, but does not receive updates in as timely a manner as stable.[216]Unstable's security is left for the package maintainers.[118]
The Debian project offers documentation and tools to harden a Debian installation both manually and automatically.[217]AppArmor support is available and enabled by default since Buster[218]. Debian provides an optional hardening wrapper, and does not harden all of its software by default using gcc features such as PIE and buffer overflow protection, unlike operating systems such as OpenBSD,[219] but tries to build as many packages as possible with hardening flags.[220]
2008 OpenSSL vulnerability[edit]
In May 2008, a Debian developer discovered that the OpenSSL package distributed with Debian and derivatives such as Ubuntu made a variety of security keys vulnerable to a random number generator attack, since only 32,767 different keys were generated.[221][222][223] The security weakness was caused by changes made in 2006 by another Debian developer in response to memory debugger warnings.[223][224] The complete resolution procedure was cumbersome because patching the security hole was not enough; it involved regenerating all affected keys and certificates.[225]
Value[edit]
The cost of developing all of the packages included in Debian 5.0 Lenny (323 million lines of code) has been estimated to be about US$8 billion, using one method based on the COCOMO model.[226] As of 2016, Black Duck Open Hub estimates that the current codebase (74 million lines of code) would cost about US$1.4 billion to develop, using a different method based on the same model.[227][228]
Derivatives[edit]
Debian is one of the most popular Linux distributions, and many other distributions have been created from the Debian codebase, including Ubuntu and Knoppix.[229] As of 2018, DistroWatch lists 141 active Debian derivatives.[230] The Debian project provides its derivatives with guidelines for best practices and encourages derivatives to merge their work back into Debian.[231][232]
See also[edit]
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- ^Berg, Christoph (January 10, 2009). 'AM report for Alexander GQ Gerasiov'. debian-newmaint (Mailing list). Debian. Retrieved July 18, 2014.
- ^Joeris, Steffen (January 3, 2010). 'AM report for Jakub Wilk [..]'. debian-newmaint (Mailing list). Debian. Retrieved July 18, 2014.
- ^Wolf, Gunnar (January 13, 2011). 'AM report for Kamal Mostafa'. debian-newmaint (Mailing list). Debian. Retrieved July 18, 2014.
- ^Faraone, Luke (January 1, 2012). 'AM report for vicho'. debian-newmaint (Mailing list). Debian. Retrieved July 18, 2014.
- ^Wiltshire, Jonathan (January 6, 2013). 'AM report for Manuel A. Fernandez Montecelo'. debian-newmaint (Mailing list). Debian. Retrieved July 18, 2014.
- ^ ab'Chapter 3. Debian Developer's Duties'. Debian Developer's Reference. Debian. Retrieved July 19, 2014.
- ^'Chapter 3 – Binary packages'. Debian Policy Manual. Debian. October 28, 2013. Retrieved July 19, 2014.
- ^'General Resolution: Endorse the concept of Debian Maintainers'. Debian. 2007. Retrieved December 13, 2008.
- ^'Chapter 2. Applying to Become a Maintainer'. Debian Developer's Reference. Debian. Retrieved October 9, 2010.
- ^Costela, Leo (February 12, 2010). 'DebianMentorsFaq'. Debian Wiki. Retrieved October 17, 2014.
- ^'Chapter 5. Managing Packages'. Debian Developer's Reference. Debian. Retrieved October 31, 2008.
- ^'Debian 'testing' distribution'. Debian. Retrieved November 24, 2008.
- ^McGovern, Neil (April 18, 2013). 'FINAL release update'. debian-devel-announce (Mailing list). Debian. Retrieved July 20, 2014.
- ^'Debian – Package Search Results – dict-bouvier'. Debian. Retrieved June 4, 2014.
- ^'Point Releases - Debian Wiki'. Debian Release Team. Retrieved September 27, 2017.
- ^'LTS - Debian Wiki'. Debian LTS Team. July 3, 2018. Retrieved August 18, 2018.
- ^'Security Information'. Debian. Retrieved December 13, 2008.
- ^'Organizations Participating'. MITRE. April 16, 2014. Retrieved June 5, 2014.
- ^'Debian Security Audit Project'. Debian. March 15, 2014. Retrieved June 4, 2014.
- ^'Advisories'. Steve Kemp. Retrieved August 18, 2014.
- ^'Steve Kemp'. Debian. Retrieved August 18, 2014.
- ^Larabel, Michael (April 18, 2014). 'Debian To Maintain 6.0 Squeeze As An LTS Release'. Phoronix. Retrieved July 21, 2014.
- ^'Debian testing security team'. Debian. Archived from the original on October 5, 2008. Retrieved 2008-10-31.
- ^'Securing Debian Manual'. Debian. Retrieved December 13, 2008.
- ^'Debian -- News -- Debian 10 'buster' released'. www.debian.org. Retrieved July 8, 2019.
- ^'Debian Secure by Default'. Debian: SbD. Archived from the original on November 3, 2004. Retrieved January 31, 2011.
- ^'Chapter 2. What's new in Debian 7.0'. Release Notes for Debian 7.0 (wheezy), 32-bit PC. Debian. Retrieved May 27, 2014.
- ^'DSA-1571-1 openssl: predictable random number generator'. Debian. May 13, 2008. Retrieved October 31, 2008.
- ^'CVE-2008-0166'. MITRE. Retrieved July 21, 2014.
- ^ abGarfinkel, Simson (May 20, 2008). 'Alarming Open-Source Security Holes'. MIT Technology Review. Retrieved July 21, 2014.
- ^'valgrind-clean the RNG'. Debian BTS. April 19, 2006. Retrieved June 21, 2014.
- ^'When Private Keys are Public: Results from the 2008 Debian OpenSSL Vulnerability'(PDF). University of California, San Diego. 2009. Retrieved June 22, 2014.
- ^Amor, J. J.; Robles, G.; González-Barahona, J. M.; Rivas, F.: Measuring Lenny: the size of Debian 5.0 ResearchGate
- ^'Estimated Cost'. Black Duck Open Hub. Retrieved January 6, 2016.
- ^'Package: ohcount (3.0.0-8 and others)'. Debian. Retrieved January 6, 2016.
- ^Vaughan-Nichols, Steven J. (December 16, 2009). 'The Five Distros That Changed Linux'. Linux Magazine. Retrieved February 14, 2013.
- ^'Based on Debian, status active'. DistroWatch. Retrieved April 8, 2018.
- ^Halchenko, Yaroslav (December 21, 2010). 'Derivatives Guidelines'. Debian Wiki. Retrieved October 17, 2014.
- ^Hertzog 2013, p. 429.
- Coleman, E. Gabriella (2013). Coding Freedom: The Ethics and Aesthetics of Hacking. Princeton University Press. ISBN0-691-14461-3.
- Hertzog, Raphaël (2013). The Debian Administrator's Handbook. Freexian. ISBN979-10-91414-03-6. Retrieved June 22, 2014.
- Krafft, Martin F. (2005). The Debian System: Concepts and Techniques. No Starch Press. ISBN978-1-59327-069-8.
External links[edit]
- Official website
Debian releases do not follow a fixed schedule. Recent releases have been made roughly biennially by the Debian Project.
Debian distribution codenames are based on the names of characters from the Toy Story films. Debian's unstable trunk is named after Sid, a character who regularly destroyed his toys.[1]
- 1Release history
Release history[edit]
Debian 1.0 was never released as a vendor accidentally shipped a development release with that version number. The package management system dpkg and its front-end dselect were developed and implemented on Debian in a previous release. A transition from the a.out binary format to the ELF binary format had already begun before the planned 1.0 release. The only supported architecture was Intel 80386 (i386).[2]
Debian 1.1 (Buzz)[edit]
Debian 1.1 (Buzz), released 17 June 1996, contained 474 packages. Debian had fully transitioned to the ELF binary format and used Linux kernel 2.0.[3]
Debian 1.2 (Rex)[edit]
Debian 1.2 (Rex), released 12 December 1996, contained 848 packages maintained by 120 developers.[4]
Debian 1.3 (Bo)[edit]
Debian 1.3 (Bo), released 5 June 1997, contained 974 packages maintained by 200 developers.[5]
Debian 2.0 (Hamm)[edit]
Debian 2.0 (Hamm), released 24 July 1998, contained over 1,500 packages maintained by over 400 developers. A transition was made to libc6 and Debian was ported to the Motorola 68000 series (m68k) architectures.[6]
Debian 2.1 (Slink)[edit]
Debian 2.1 (Slink), released 9 March 1999, contained about 2,250 packages. The front-end APT was introduced for the package management system and Debian was ported to Alpha and SPARC.[7][8]
Debian 2.2 (Potato)[edit]
Debian 2.2 (Potato), released 14–15 August 2000, contained 2,600 packages maintained by more than 450 developers. New packages included the display managerGDM, the directory serviceOpenLDAP, the security softwareOpenSSH and the mail transfer agentPostfix. Debian was ported to the PowerPC and ARM architectures.[9][10][11]
Debian 3.0 (Woody)[edit]
Debian 3.0 (Woody), released 19 July 2002, contained around 8,500 packages maintained by more than 900 developers. KDE was introduced and Debian was ported to the following architectures: IA-64, PA-RISC (hppa), mips and mipsel and IBM ESA/390 (s390).[12][13][14]
Debian 3.1 (Sarge)[edit]
Debian 3.1 (Sarge), released 6 June 2005, contained around 15,400 packages. debian-installer and OpenOffice.org were introduced.[15][16]
Debian 4.0 (Etch)[edit]
Debian 4.0 (Etch), released 8 April 2007, contained around 18,000 packages maintained by more than 1,030 developers. Debian was ported to x86-64 (amd64) and support for the Motorola 68000 series (m68k) architectures was dropped.[17][18] This version introduced utf-8 and udev device management by default.
Debian 5.0 (Lenny)[edit]
Debian 5.0 (Lenny), released 14 February 2009, contained more than 23,000 packages. Debian was ported to the ARM EABI (armel) architecture.[19][20][21]
Debian 6.0 (Squeeze)[edit]
Debian 6.0 (Squeeze), released 6 February 2011, contained more than 29,000 packages. The default Linux kernel included was deblobbed beginning with this release. The web browser Chromium was introduced and Debian was ported to the kfreebsd-i386 and kfreebsd-amd64 architectures (while that port was later discontinued), and support for the Intel 486, Alpha, and PA-RISC (hppa) architectures was dropped.[22][23][24][25]
Squeeze was the first release of Debian in which non-free firmware components (aka 'binary blobs') were excluded from the 'main' repository as a matter of policy.[26][27][28][29]
Debian 7 (Wheezy)[edit]
Debian 7 (Wheezy), released 4 May 2013, contained more than 36,000 packages. Support for UEFI was added and Debian was ported to the armhf and IBM ESA/390 (s390x) architectures.[30][31][32]
Debian 8 (Jessie)[edit]
Debian 8 (Jessie), released 25–26 April 2015, contained more than 43,000 packages, with systemd installed by default instead of init. (sysvinit and upstart packages are provided as alternatives.) Debian was ported to the ARM64 and ppc64le architectures, while support for the IA-64, kfreebsd-amd64 and kfreebsd-i386, IBM ESA/390 (s390) (only the 31-bit variant; the newer 64-bits390x was retained) and SPARC architectures were dropped.[33][34][35]
Debian 9 (Stretch)[edit]
Debian 9 (Stretch) was released on 17 June 2017, two years and two months after Debian 8.0, and contained more than 51,000 packages.[36] The latest minor update, called a 'point release', is version 9.11,[37] released on September 8, 2019; 25 days ago. Major upgrades include the Linux kernel going from version 3.16 to 4.9, GNOME desktop version going from 3.14 to 3.22, KDE Plasma 4 was upgraded to Plasma 5, LibreOffice 4.3 upgraded to 5.2 and Qt upgraded from 4.8 to 5.7. LXQt has been added as well.
The Intel 586 (Pentium), Intel 586/686 hybrid (Pentium with MMX) and PowerPC architectures are no longer supported as of Stretch.[38][39][40]Archery bow master game download.
Debian 10 (Buster)[edit]
Debian 10 (Buster) was released on 6 July 2019, two years and a month after Debian 9 (Stretch).[41] Debian 10 contains 57,703 packages, supports UEFI Secure Boot,[42] has AppArmor enabled by default, uses LUKS2 as the default LUKS format, and uses Wayland for GNOME by default.[43] The latest minor update (point release), is version 10.1,[44] released on September 7, 2019; 26 days ago. The Debian project plans to support Debian 10 until 2022, with long-term support (LTS) until 2024.[45]
Timetable:[46]
- 12 January 2019: transition freeze
- 12 February 2019: soft-freeze
- 12 March 2019: full freeze[47]
- 6 July 2019: release[41]
- 2022: Projected end-of-life, transition to long-term support (LTS)
- 2024: Projected end of long-term support[45]
Debian 10 ships with kernel version 4.19, LibreOffice 6.1, Krita 4.0, Plasma 5.14, KDE Applications 17.08, Qt 5.11, and VLC 3.0.[48][43]
Debian 11 (Bullseye)[edit]
Debian 7 Wheezy Kernel Version
Debian 11 (Bullseye) is the upcoming release of the operating system. No release date has been set yet.
Bullseye is dropping the remaining Qt4/KDE 4 libraries and Python 2.
Bullseye will not support MIPS anymore according to Phoronix.com;https://www.phoronix.com/scan.php?page=news_item&px=Debian-Drops-Old-32-Bit-MIPS
Debian 12 (Bookworm)[edit]
Debian 12 (Bookworm) is also an upcoming release of the operating system.
Release table[edit]
Debian Wheezy Python Version
Version (Code name) | Release date | Ports | Packages | Linux kernel | Security support until | Long-term support until | References |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Old version, no longer supported: 0.90 | August–December 1993 | 1 | N/A | N/A | N/A | None | [2] |
Old version, no longer supported: 0.91 | January 1994 | N/A | N/A | N/A | [2] | ||
Old version, no longer supported: 0.93R5 | March 1995 | N/A | N/A | N/A | [2] | ||
Old version, no longer supported: 0.93R6 | November 1995 | N/A | N/A | N/A | [2] | ||
Old version, no longer supported: 1.0 | Never | N/A | N/A | N/A | [2] | ||
Old version, no longer supported: 1.1 (Buzz) | 17 June 1996 | 474 | 2.0 | N/A | [2] | ||
Old version, no longer supported: 1.2 (Rex) | 12 December 1996 | 848 | 2.0.27 | N/A | [2][49] | ||
Old version, no longer supported: 1.3 (Bo) | 5 June 1997 | 974 | 2.0.33 | N/A | [2] | ||
Old version, no longer supported: 2.0 (Hamm) | 24 July 1998 | 2 | ≈ 1,500 | 2.0.34 | N/A | [2] | |
Old version, no longer supported: 2.1 (Slink) | 9 March 1999 | 4 | ≈ 2,250 | 2.0.34, 2.0.35, 2.0.36, 2.0.38 | 30 October 2000 | [2][8][50] | |
Old version, no longer supported: 2.2 (Potato) | 14–15 August 2000 | 6 | ≈ 3,900 | 2.0.38, 2.2.19 | 30 June 2003 | [2][10][11] | |
Old version, no longer supported: 3.0 (Woody) | 19 July 2002 | 11 | ≈ 8,500 | 2.2.20, 2.4.18 | 30 June 2006 | [2][13][14][51] | |
Old version, no longer supported: 3.1 (Sarge) | 6 June 2005 | ≈ 15,400 | 2.4.27, 2.6.8 | 31 March 2008 | [2][16][52] | ||
Old version, no longer supported: 4.0 (Etch) | 8 April 2007 | ≈ 18,000 | 2.6.18 | 15 February 2010 | [2][18][53] | ||
Old version, no longer supported: 5.0 (Lenny) | 14 February 2009 | 12 | ≈ 23,000 | 2.6.26 | 6 February 2012 | [2][20][21] | |
Old version, no longer supported: 6.0 (Squeeze) | 6 February 2011 | 11 | ≈ 29,000 | 2.6.32 | 19 July 2014 | 29 February 2016 | [2][24][25][54][55] |
Old version, no longer supported: 7 (Wheezy) | 4 May 2013 | 13 | ≈ 36,000 | 3.2 | 26 April 2016 | 31 May 2018 | [2][31][32][56][54] |
Older version, yet still supported: 8 (Jessie)[57] | 25–26 April 2015 | 10 | ≈ 43,000 | 3.16 | 17 June 2018 | 30 June 2020[58] | [2][59][35][54] |
Older version, yet still supported: 9 (Stretch) | 17 June 2017 | ≈ 52,000 | 4.9 | 2020 | June 2022 | [2][36][60][61][54] | |
Current stable version:10 (Buster) | 6 July 2019 | ≈ 59,000 | 4.19 | 2022 | 2024 | [62][63][43] | |
Future release: 11 (Bullseye) | TBA | TBA | TBA | TBA | TBA | TBA | [64] |
Future release: 12 (Bookworm) | TBA | TBA | TBA | TBA | TBA | TBA | [65] |
unstable (Sid) | Never | 22 (13 official) | > 60,000 (September 2019) | 5.2 (September 2019) | N/A | N/A | |
Old version Latest version Future release |
When a release transitions to Long Term Support phase (LTS-phase), security is no longer handled by the main Debian security team.[66]
Release timeline[edit]
Timeline description | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Release | First | From | Last | Until | References | |
Buzz | 1.1 | 17 June 1996 | N/A | N/A | [citation needed] | |
Rex | 1.2 | 12 December 1996 | N/A | N/A | [citation needed] | |
Bo | 1.3 | 5 June 1997 | 1.3.1.r8 | 16 May 1998 | [citation needed] | |
Hamm | 2.0r0 | 24 July 1998 | 2.0r5 | 15 February 1999 | [citation needed] | |
Slink | 2.1r0 | 9 March 1999 | 2.1r5 | 30 September 2000 | [citation needed] | |
Potato | 2.2r0 | 14–15 August 2000 | 2.2r7 | 19 July 2002 | [citation needed] | |
Woody | 3.0r0 | 19 July 2002 | 3.0r6 | 30 June 2006 | [citation needed] | |
Sarge | 3.1r0 | 6 June 2005 | 3.1r8 | 12 April 2008 | [citation needed] | |
Etch | 4.0r0 | 8 April 2007 | 4.0r9 | 22 May 2010 | [citation needed] | |
Lenny | 5.0 | 14 February 2009 | 5.0.10 | 10 March 2012 | [citation needed] | |
Squeeze | 6.0 | 6 February 2011 | 6.0.10 | 19 July 2014 | [citation needed] | |
Wheezy | 7.0 | 4 May 2013 | 7.11 | 4 June 2016 | [citation needed] | |
Jessie | 8.0 | 25 April 2015 | 8.11 | TBA | [67] | |
Stretch | 9.0 | 17 June 2017 | 9.9 | TBA | [68] | |
Buster | 10.0 | 6 July 2019 | 10.0 | TBA | [citation needed] |
Port timeline[edit]
Debian Wheezy Download
Timeline description | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Port | Pointer Size | Endian | Added | Dropped | References |
alpha | 64 bits | Little | Slink | Squeeze | [69] |
amd64 | 64 bits | Little | Etch | Current | [70] |
arm | 32 bits | Little | Potato | Squeeze | [71] |
armel | 32 bits | Little | Lenny | Current | [71] |
armhf | 32 bits | Little | Wheezy | Current | [71] |
arm64 | 64 bits | Little | Jessie | Current | [71] |
hppa | 32 bits | Big | Woody | Squeeze | [72] |
i386 | 32 bits | Little | first | Current | [73] |
ia64 | 64 bits | Little | Woody | Jessie | [74] |
kfreebsd-amd64 | 64 bits | Little | Squeeze | Jessie | [75] |
kfreebsd-i386 | 32 bits | Little | Squeeze | Jessie | [75] |
m68k | 32 bits | Big | Hamm | Etch | [76] |
mips | 32 bits | Big | Woody | Bullseye | [77] |
mips64el | 64 bits | Little | Stretch | Current | [78] |
mipsel | 32 bits | Little | Woody | Current | [77] |
powerpc | 32 bits | Big | Potato | Stretch | [79] |
ppc64el | 64 bits | Little | Jessie | Current | [79] |
s390 | 32 bits | Big | Woody | Jessie | [80] |
s390x | 64 bits | Big | Wheezy | Current | [80] |
sparc | 32 bits | Big | Slink | Jessie | [81] |
See also[edit]
Debian Wheezy Raspberry Pi
References[edit]
Debian Wheezy Release Notes
- ^'Debian Releases - Codenames'. Debian Wiki. Debian Wiki. Retrieved 25 July 2017.
- ^ abcdefghijklmnopqrst'A Brief History of Debian'. The Debian Project. Retrieved 23 November 2015.
- ^'A Brief History of Debian'. The Debian Project. Retrieved 23 November 2015.
Debian 1.1 Buzz (June 17th, 1996): This was the first Debian release with a code name. It was taken, like all others so far, from a character in one of the Toy Story movies.. in this case, Buzz Lightyear. By this time, Bruce Perens had taken over leadership of the Project from Ian Murdock, and Bruce was working at Pixar, the company that produced the movies. This release was fully ELF, used Linux kernel 2.0, and contained 474 packages.
- ^'A Brief History of Debian'. The Debian Project. Retrieved 23 November 2015.
Rex is the code name for a former Stable Debian distribution.It was released on December 12th, 1996 as Debian GNU/Linux 1.2: Named for the plastic dinosaur in the Toy Story movies. This release consisted of 848 packages maintained by 120 developers. It was superseded by DebianBo on June 5th, 1997.Rex is now obsolete and security updates are no longer provided.
- ^'A Brief History of Debian'. The Debian Project. Retrieved 23 November 2015.
Debian 1.3 Bo (June 5th, 1997): Named for Bo Peep, the shepherdess. This release consisted of 974 packages maintained by 200 developers.
- ^'A Brief History of Debian'. The Debian Project. Retrieved 23 November 2015.
Debian 2.0 Hamm (July 24th, 1998): Named for the piggy-bank in the Toy Story movies. This was the first multi-architecture release of Debian, adding support for the Motorola 68000 series architectures. With Ian Jackson as Project Leader, this release made the transition to libc6, and consisted of over 1500 packages maintained by over 400 developers.
- ^'A Brief History of Debian'. The Debian Project. Retrieved 23 November 2015.
Debian 2.1 Slink (March 9th, 1999): Named for the slinky-dog in the movie. Two more architectures were added, Alpha and SPARC. With Wichert Akkerman as Project Leader, this release consisted of about 2250 packages and required 2 CDs in the official set. The key technical innovation was the introduction of apt, a new package management interface. Widely emulated, apt addressed issues resulting from Debian's continuing growth, and established a new paradigm for package acquisition and installation on Open Source operating systems.
- ^ ab'Debian 2.1 (slink) Information'. The Debian Project. Retrieved 23 November 2015.
- ^'A Brief History of Debian'. The Debian Project. Retrieved 23 November 2015.
Debian 2.2 Potato (15 August 2000): Named for 'Mr Potato Head' in the Toy Story movies. This release added support for the PowerPC and ARM architectures. With Wichert still serving as Project Leader, this release consisted of more than 3900 binary packages derived from over 2600 source packages maintained by more than 450 Debian developers.
- ^ ab'Debian GNU/Linux 2.2 ('potato') Release Information'. The Debian Project. Retrieved 23 November 2015.
- ^ ab'Debian GNU/Linux 2.2, the 'Joel 'Espy' Klecker' release, is officially released'. The Debian Project. Retrieved 23 November 2015.
- ^'A Brief History of Debian'. The Debian Project. Retrieved 23 November 2015.
Debian 3.0 Woody (19 July 2002): Named for the main character the Toy Story movies: 'Woody' the cowboy. Even more architectures were added in this release: IA-64, HP PA-RISC, MIPS (big endian), MIPS (little endian) and S/390. This is also the first release to include cryptographic software due to the restrictions for exportation being lightened in the US, and also the first one to include KDE, now that the license issues with QT were resolved. With Bdale Garbee recently appointed Project Leader, and more than 900 Debian developers, this release contained around 8,500 binary packages and 7 binary CDs in the official set.
- ^ ab'Debian GNU/Linux 3.0 'woody' Release Information'. The Debian Project. Retrieved 23 November 2015.
- ^ ab'Debian GNU/Linux 3.0 released'. The Debian Project. Retrieved 23 November 2015.
- ^'A Brief History of Debian'. The Debian Project. Retrieved 23 November 2015.
Debian 3.1 Sarge (6 June 2005): named for the sergeant of the Green Plastic Army Men. No new architectures were added to the release, although an unofficial AMD64 port was published at the same time and distributed through the new Alioth project hosting site. This release features a new installer: debian-installer, a modular piece of software that feature automatic hardware detection, unattended installation features and was released fully translated to over thirty languages. It was also the first release to include a full office suite: OpenOffice.org. Branden Robinson had just been appointed as Project Leader. This release was made by more than nine hundred Debian developers, and contained around 15,400 binary packages and 14 binary CDs in the official set.
- ^ ab'Debian 'sarge' Release Information'. The Debian Project. Retrieved 23 November 2015.
- ^'A Brief History of Debian'. The Debian Project. Retrieved 23 November 2015.
Debian 4.0 Etch (8 April 2007): named for the sketch toy in the movie. One architecture was added in this release: AMD64, and official support for m68k was dropped. This release continued using the debian-installer, but featuring in this release a graphical installer, cryptographic verification of downloaded packages, more flexible partitioning (with support for encrypted partitions), simplified mail configuration, a more flexible desktop selection, simplified but improved localization and new modes, including a rescue mode. New installations would not need to reboot through the installation process as the previous two phases of installation were now integrated. This new installer provided support for scripts using composed characters and complex languages in its graphical version, increasing the number of available translations to over fifty. Sam Hocevar was appointed Project Leader the very same day, and the project included more than one thousand and thirty Debian developers. The release contained around 18,000 binary packages over 20 binary CDs (3 DVDs) in the official set. There were also two binary CDs available to install the system with alternate desktop environments different to the default one.
- ^ ab'Debian 'etch' Release Information'. The Debian Project. Retrieved 23 November 2015.
- ^'A Brief History of Debian'. The Debian Project. Retrieved 23 November 2015.
Debian 5.0 Lenny (February 2009): named for the wind up binoculars in the Toy Story movies. One architecture was added in this release: ARM EABI (or armel), providing support for newer ARM processors and deprecating the old ARM port (arm). The m68k port was not included in this release, although it was still provided in the unstable distribution. This release did not feature the FreeBSD port, although much work on the port had been done to make it qualify it did not meet yet the qualification requirements for this release.
- ^ ab'Debian 'lenny' Release Information'. The Debian Project. Retrieved 23 November 2015.
- ^ ab'Debian GNU/Linux 5.0 released'. The Debian Project. Retrieved 23 November 2015.
- ^'Debian i386 architecture now requires a 686-class processor'. The Debian Project. Retrieved 18 June 2017.
Support for 486-class processors was dropped, somewhat accidentally, in squeeze.
- ^'A Brief History of Debian'. The Debian Project. Retrieved 23 November 2015.
Debian 6.0 Squeeze (February 2011): named for the green three-eyed aliens. The release was frozen on 6 August 2010, with many of the Debian developers gathered at the 10th Debconf at New York City. While two architectures (alpha and hppa) were dropped, two architectures of the new FreeBSD port (kfreebsd-i386 and kfreebsd-amd64) were made available as technology preview, including the kernel and userland tools as well as common server software (though not advanced desktop features yet). This was the first time a Linux distribution has been extended to also allow use of a non-Linux kernel.
- ^ ab'Debian 'squeeze' Release Information'. The Debian Project. Retrieved 23 November 2015.
- ^ ab'Debian 6.0 Squeeze released'. The Debian Project. Retrieved 23 November 2015.
- ^'Debian aims for FSF endorsement - The H Open: News and Features'. H-online.com. Retrieved 8 September 2018.
- ^'Debian -- News -- Debian 6.0 'Squeeze' to be released with completely free Linux Kernel'. Debian.org. Retrieved 8 September 2018.
- ^Proffitt, Brian. 'Debian GNU/Linux seeks alignment with Free Software Foundation'. Retrieved 8 September 2018.
- ^'squeeze your non-free firmware away'. Upsilon.cc. Retrieved 8 September 2018.
- ^'A Brief History of Debian'. The Debian Project. Retrieved 23 November 2015.
Debian 7.0 Wheezy (May 2013): named for the rubber toy penguin with a red bow tie. One architecture was included in this release (armhf) and this release introduced multi-arch support, which allowed users to install packages from multiple architectures on the same machine. Improvements in the installation process allowed visually impaired people to install the system using software speech for the first time. This was also the first release that supported the installation and booting in devices using UEFI firmware.
- ^ ab'Debian 'wheezy' Release Information'. The Debian Project. Retrieved 23 November 2015.
- ^ ab'Debian 7.0 Wheezy released'. The Debian Project. Retrieved 23 November 2015.
- ^'A Brief History of Debian'. The Debian Project. Retrieved 23 November 2015.
Debian 8 Jessie (April 2015): named for the cowgirl doll who first appeared in Toy Story 2.
- ^'Debian 'jessie' Release Information'. The Debian Project. Retrieved 23 November 2015.
- ^ ab'Debian 8 Jessie released'. The Debian Project. Retrieved 23 November 2015.
- ^ ab'Release of stretch on 2017-06-17'. Debian.org. 17 June 2017. Retrieved 28 August 2017.
- ^'ChangeLog'. stretch. Debian. 17 June 2017. Retrieved 8 September 2019.
- ^'Debian i386 architecture now requires a 686-class processor'.
Last year it was decided to increase the minimum CPU features for the i386 architecture to 686-class in the stretch release cycle. This means dropping support for 586-class and hybrid 586/686 processors[1].(Support for 486-class processors was dropped, somewhat accidentally, in squeeze.) This was implemented in the Linux kernel packages starting with Linux 4.3, which was uploaded to unstable in December last year. In case you missed that change, gcc for i386 has recently been changed to target 686-class processors and is generating code that will crash on other processors. Any such systems still running testing or unstable will need to be switched to run stable (jessie). The older processors will continue to be supported in jessie until at least 2018, and until 2020 if i386 is included in jessie LTS. The following processors, supported in jessie, are now unspported: * AMD K5, K6, K6-2, (aka K6 3D), K6-3 * DM&P/SiS Vortex86, Vortex86SX * Cyrix III, MediaGX, MediaGXm * IDT Winchip C6, Winchip 2 * Intel Pentium, Pentium with MMX * Rise mP6 * VIA C3 'Samuel 2', C3 'Ezra'
- ^'Release architectures for Debian 9 'Stretch''.
The only change from Jessie is the removal of powerpc as a release architecture. We discussed this at length, and eventually took the view that the least disservice to users of that port is to provide reasonable notice of its discontinuation. We recognise and acknowledge that discontinuing any port is unavoidably disruptive. The question of whether powerpc remains an architecture in the main archive or moves to ports is one for FTP masters, not the release team.
- ^'Debian Is Dropping Support for Older 32-bit Hardware Architectures in Debian 9'.
The change has already been implemented to the Linux kernel 4.3 packages, which have been uploaded to the Debian Unstable repositories last year. And today users are being informed to move to Debian GNU/Linux 8 'Jessie' if they're still using Debian on older computers powered by i586 or i486 processors. If i386 support is to be included in the Debian GNU/Linux 8 'Jessie' release, which should enter LTS (Long Term Support) stage from May 2018, the operating system will then support older 32-bit processors until the year 2020.
- ^ ab'Debian 10 'buster' released'. 6 July 2019. Retrieved 7 July 2019.
- ^Larabel, Michael (30 April 2018). 'Debian Making Progress On UEFI SecureBoot Support In 2018'. Phoronix. Phoronix Media. Retrieved 23 May 2018.
- ^ abc'What's new in Debian 10'. Debian.org. Retrieved 5 July 2018.
- ^'ChangeLog'. buster. Debian. 7 September 2019. Retrieved 18 September 2019.
- ^ ab'Debian Long Term Support'. Debian Wiki. Retrieved 7 July 2019.
- ^Larabel, Michael (16 April 2018). 'Debian 10 'Buster' Should Be Out Around Mid-2019, Debian 12 Is 'Bookworm''. Phoronix. Phoronix Media. Retrieved 23 May 2018.
- ^'Planned release of buster on 2019-07-06 and the last weeks up to the release'. lists.debian.org. Retrieved 1 July 2019.
- ^'DistroWatch.com: Debian'. DistroWatch.com. Unsigned Integer Limited. 23 May 2018. Retrieved 23 May 2018.
- ^Bruce Perens (12 December 1996). 'Debian 1.2 Released'. The Debian Project.
- ^'[SECURITY] Security policy for Debian 2.1 (slink) (updated)'. The Debian Project. Retrieved 23 November 2015.
- ^'Security Support for Debian 3.0 to be terminated'. The Debian Project. Retrieved 23 November 2015.
- ^'Security Support for Debian 3.1 to be terminated'. The Debian Project. Retrieved 23 November 2015.
- ^'Security Support for Debian 4.0 to be terminated'. The Debian Project. Retrieved 23 November 2015.
- ^ abcd'LTS'. The Debian Project. Retrieved 23 November 2015.
- ^'[SECURITY] [DSA 2907-1] Announcement of long term support for Debian oldstable'. The Debian Project. Retrieved 23 November 2015.
- ^'Debian 6.0 Long Term Support reaching end-of-life'. The Debian Project. Retrieved 1 March 2016.
- ^https://www.debian.org/releases/jessie/
- ^https://wiki.debian.org/LTS/Jessie
- ^'Debian 'Jessie' Release Information'. The Debian Project. Retrieved 23 November 2015.
- ^'DebianStretch - Debian Wiki'. Wiki.debian.org. Retrieved 9 April 2018.
- ^'Debian 'stretch' Release Information'. The Debian Project. Retrieved 23 November 2015.
- ^Wiltshire, Jonathan. 'Release Team Sprint Results'. The Debian Project. Retrieved 22 January 2016.
- ^Monfort, Emilio Pozuelo (16 April 2018). 'Bits from the release team: full steam ahead towards buster'. The Debian Project.
- ^Wiltshire, Jonathan. 'Bits from the release team: Winter is Coming (but not to South Africa)'. The Debian Project. Retrieved 7 July 2016.
- ^Pozuelo Monfort, Emilio. 'Bits from the release team: full steam ahead towards buster'. The Debian Project. Retrieved 16 April 2018.
- ^'LTS - Debian Wiki'. Wiki.debian.org. Retrieved 25 October 2017.
Debian Long Term Support (LTS) is a project to extend the lifetime of all Debian stable releases to (at least) 5 years. [.] Thus the Debian LTS team takes over security maintenance of the various releases once the Debian Security team stops its work.
- ^'Updated Debian 8: 8.11 released'. The Debian Project. Retrieved 15 May 2019.
June 23rd, 2018
- ^'Updated Debian 9: 9.9 released'. The Debian Project. Retrieved 15 May 2019.
April 27th, 2019
- ^'Debian GNU/Linux on Alpha – Status'. Debian.org.
- ^'AMD64 Port'. Debian.org.
- ^ abcd'ARM Ports'. Debian.org.
- ^'Debian for PA-RISC'. Debian.org.
- ^'Debian GNU/Linux on x86 Machines'. Debian.org.
- ^'Debian for IA-64'. Debian.org.
- ^ ab'Debian GNU/kFreeBSD'. Debian.org.
- ^'Debian on Motorola 680x0'. Debian.org.
- ^ ab'MIPS Port'. Debian.org.
- ^'MIPSPort'. Debian Wiki.
- ^ ab'Debian for PowerPC'. Debian.org.
- ^ ab'S/390 Port'. Debian.org.
- ^'Debian SPARC Port'. Debian.org.
External links[edit]
Ubuntu Wheezy
- Debian Releases at Debian Wiki