On Wed, 1 Jan 2020 03:52:28 +0100, Arnt wrote in message
<20200101035228.284bce12@sda3>:
> ..testing an ascii 2.1 box:
> Retrieving bug reports... Done
> Parsing Found/Fixed information... Done
> grave bugs of firefox-esr (68.2.0esr-1~deb9u2 → 68.3.0esr-1~deb9u1)
> <Forwarded> b1 - #944706 - firefox-esr: Tab crashes immediately after
> start up and Firefox ESR was unusable. Summary:
> firefox-esr(1 bug)
> Are you sure you want to install/upgrade the above packages?
> [Y/n/?/...]
>
..hitting [<-'] returns:
apt-listchanges: Changelogs
---------------------------
firefox-esr (68.3.0esr-1~deb9u1) stretch-security; urgency=medium
* New upstream release.
* Fixes for mfsa2019-37, also known as:
CVE-2019-17008, CVE-2019-11745, CVE-2019-17010, CVE-2019-17005,
CVE-2019-17011, CVE-2019-17012.
* debian/control.in: Bump nss build dependencies.
* intl/icu_sources_data.py:
- Revert change from 68.2.0esr-1~deb9u2.
- Don't build ICU in parallel.
* gfx/skia/skia/third_party/skcms/src/Transform_inl.h: Work around
GCC ICEs on arm.
(Thanks Emilio Pozuelo Monfort)
-- Mike Hommey <glandium@???> Sat, 07 Dec 2019 08:58:01 +0900
Reading changelogs... Done
apt-listchanges: Mailing root: apt-listchanges: changelogs for sda3
apt-listdifferences: fetching source packages
Get:1 firefox-esr_68.3.0esr-1~deb9u1.dsc [43.4 kB]
Get:2 firefox-esr_68.3.0esr.orig-l10n-ach.tar.bz2 [264 kB]
...
Get:93 firefox-esr_68.3.0esr.orig-l10n-zh-TW.tar.bz2 [1018 kB]
Get:94 firefox-esr_68.3.0esr.orig.tar.xz [349 MB]
Get:95 firefox-esr_68.3.0esr-1~deb9u1.debian.tar.xz [176 kB]
Fetched 421 MB in 6s (809 kB/s)
..not posting the diff: diff \
-Nru /mnt/tmp/ZEStcyJ4UU/firefox-esr-68.2.0esr \
/mnt/tmp/UmCsVdoA5s/firefox-esr-68.3.0esr \
>/tmp/firefox-esr-68.2-3.0esr.diff
-rw-r--r-- 1 root root 2848094 Jan 1 04:25
/tmp/firefox-esr-68.2-3.0esr.diff
..I just tested firefox-esr-68.2-3.0esr, which works ok both
from the launch menu and from the cli.
--
..med vennlig hilsen = with Kind Regards from Arnt Karlsen
...with a number of polar bear hunters in his ancestry...
Scenarios always come in sets of three:
best case, worst case, and just in case.