Hi folks,
I was always "obsessed" with the latest and greatest (software) therefore I always preferred using (Linux) rolling distros.
However that changes, in the last five years I moved to stable (Linux) distros, such as Debian and Devuan, and eventually ended up with FreeBSD.
Now I really like the FreeBSD model, the base system is stable while third party software is fairly updated and you get new software almost as it was a rolling distro, whether you are in quarterly or latest branch.
But what if you need a "stable" as in Debian, FreeBSD workstation for production?
Is that possible without holding the packages, and missing important security update?
For what I understand from the handbook, the FreeBSD stable branch moves slower but it might be affected by bugs and vulnerabilities...
I made a pool out of it, you can either reply or select an answer...
I was always "obsessed" with the latest and greatest (software) therefore I always preferred using (Linux) rolling distros.
However that changes, in the last five years I moved to stable (Linux) distros, such as Debian and Devuan, and eventually ended up with FreeBSD.
Now I really like the FreeBSD model, the base system is stable while third party software is fairly updated and you get new software almost as it was a rolling distro, whether you are in quarterly or latest branch.
But what if you need a "stable" as in Debian, FreeBSD workstation for production?
Is that possible without holding the packages, and missing important security update?
For what I understand from the handbook, the FreeBSD stable branch moves slower but it might be affected by bugs and vulnerabilities...
26.5.2. Using FreeBSD-STABLE
FreeBSD-STABLE is the development branch from which major releases are made.Changes go into this branch at a slower pace and with the general assumption that they have first been tested in FreeBSD-CURRENT.This is still a development branch and, at any given time, the sources for FreeBSD-STABLE may or may not be suitable for general use.It is simply another engineering development track, not a resource for end-users.Users who do not have the resources to perform testing should instead run the most recent release of FreeBSD.
I made a pool out of it, you can either reply or select an answer...