Andy Smith <a...@strugglers.net> writes: > Hi Byung-Hee, > > On Tue, Sep 15, 2020 at 10:29:46AM +0900, 황병희 wrote: >> Hi i just curious about Bullseye [0]. The Bullseye will be LTS? > > Debian does not designate certain releases as LTS releases, so > bullseye will be no more "an LTS release" than buster is now, or > stretch, jessie etc were before them. You are taking an Ubuntu > concept and trying to apply it to Debian. > > Debian *does* have an LTS team, who continue to provide security > support on a best-effort basis after a release has become so old > that it ceases to receive security support by the Debian security > team. They've been doing this since the squeeze (6) release. > > For example, from 6 July 2020 stretch ceased receiving security > support by the Debian security team and only receives such support > from the LTS team. This will be for a limited selection of packages > and may not be as speedy as regular security support. The LTS > support for stretch will end on 30 June 2022. > > Ubuntu's LTS releases do tend to look tempting from a support > lifetime point of view, but it is important to realise that quite a > lot of useful software is excluded from their LTS support. I have > also found updates of the things that are theoretically supported to > be very varied. > > I run Ubuntu on some of my desktops and laptops and it is rare that > I manage to reach the end of the theoretical LTS support schedule > before needing updated software has forced me to upgrade release. > > For more information please see: > > https://wiki.debian.org/LTS > > Cheers,
Thank you for kind story, Andy^^^ Sincerely, Byung-Hee -- ^고맙습니다 _救濟蒼生_ 감사합니다_^))//