Using a stable version of arch at a (quite large) company scale is really 
easy :
 - Install a first mirror and use a test computer on this one to test 
every application your company use.
 - Install a second mirror that takes snapshots of the first one when your 
tests are OK
 - Configure every computer to go on the second mirror and to run pacman 
-Suy every week

Regards,
Colin Pitrat



Andreas Radke <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 
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Re: [arch] conservative/stable branch





Andreas Radke <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 
Please respond to : General Discusson about Arch Linux 
<[email protected]>
Sent by: [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
07/11/2007 17:37


Am Wed, 7 Nov 2007 04:56:58 +0000
schrieb "Jorge Leon" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:

> On Tue, 6 Nov 2007 14:56:16 "Roman Kyrylych" wrote:
> > There were occasional talks about more conservative/stable branch
> > for Arch, so this possibly may happen in future.
> 
> I would love to see this happen.
> 
> Jorge.
> 
> _______________________________________________
> arch mailing list
> [email protected]
> http://archlinux.org/mailman/listinfo/arch
> 

I can imagine a stable distribution even for servers and maybe later
even for corporate market. It would be based on ArchLinux. Pacman
and Arch's simplicity are worth to be the base of a stable
distribution. There are always situations where you want it to just
work. Where you don't want to be afraid of every -Syu.
Right now we let Frugalware rule this market place completely. But
things may change with time.

Many things and projects are possible. As always - thing just have to
be done by someone.

Andy


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