> >
> ------------------------------
>
> Message: 6
> Date: Sun, 14 May 2017 10:10:19 -0400
> From: fsmithred <fsmithred@???>
> To: dng@???
> Subject: Re: [DNG] reportbug default bts
> Message-ID: <ea48b39e-7a32-e773-dad3-3a05090bc618@???>
> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=utf-8
>
> On 05/13/2017 11:03 AM, Steve Litt wrote:
> > On Sat, 13 May 2017 01:06:38 -1000
> > Joel Roth <joelz@???> wrote:
> >
> >> Long before three weeks ago. I don't usually upgrade or
> >> dist-upgrade unless there is some particular need.
> >> Probably I'm not alone, even if that is not considered
> >> best practice.
> >
> > I never dist-upgrade. From what I hear, it breaks things. If I feel the
> > need to dist-upgrade, it's probably time to back up, reformat the
> > disks, and clean-install a later version.
> >
> > SteveT
> >
>
> I always do dist-upgrade on stable. The aptitude equivalent is
> full-upgrade. For curiosity, I just did 'apt-get upgrade' on an
> installation that hasn't been upgraded in a long time. Following that with
> 'apt-get dist-upgrade' shows me that I would have missed getting
> firefox-esr without dist-upgade.
>
> When I've compared upgrade to dist-upgrade (or aptitude safe-upgrade vs.
> full-upgrade) in the past, they are usually the same in the stable
> release. In Testing, it's good to do them separately to prevent breakage.
>
> fsmithred
>
>
>
>
> ------------------------------
I did not think to do a dist-upgrade after moving to ascii. I just did
upgrade.
I just did a dist-upgrade and had more packages upgrade. So, thank you
for this thread.