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another view of the upgrade work
authored
Jun 18, 2025
by
anarcat
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howto/upgrades.md
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@@ -90,6 +90,27 @@ effectively, constantly upgrading Debian. This is something we're
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@@ -90,6 +90,27 @@ effectively, constantly upgrading Debian. This is something we're
hoping to fix starting in 2025, by upgrading only every other year
hoping to fix starting in 2025, by upgrading only every other year
(e.g.
*not*
upgrading at all in 2026).
(e.g.
*not*
upgrading at all in 2026).
Another way to view this is how long it takes to
*retire*
a release,
which is, how long a release lives once we start installing a the
release after:
| Releases | Date | Milestone | Duration | Triggering event |
|----------|------------|-------------------|--------------|----------------------|
| 8 9 10 | 2019-08-15 | N/A | N/A | Debian 10 start |
| 9 10 11 | 2021-08-26 | N/A | N/A | Debian 11 start |
| 10 11 | 2021-11-17 | Debian 10 upgrade | 27 months | Debian 9 retired |
| 10 11 12 | 2023-04-08 | N/A | N/A | Debian 12 start |
| 11 12 | 2024-11-14 | Debian 11 upgrade | 37 months | Debian 10 retirement |
| 12 | 2024-12-10 | Debian 12 upgrade | 32 months | Debian 11 retirement |
| 12 13 | 2025-04-16 | N/A | N/A | Debian 13 start |
| 13 | TBD | Debian 13 upgrade | < 12 months? | Debian 12 retirement |
If all goes to plan, the bookworm retirement (or trixie upgrade) will
have been one of the shortest on record, at less than a year. It feels
like having less releases maintained in parallel shortens that
duration as well, although the data above doesn't currently
corroborate that feeling.
# Minor upgrades
# Minor upgrades
## Unattended upgrades
## Unattended upgrades
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