On Tue 17 Aug 2021 at 10:46:49 (+0100), Peter Hillier-Brook wrote: > On 17/08/2021 02:21, Robbi Nespu wrote: > > I have been using debian testing (bullseye) for 1 year (plus) and I want > > to use sid as my daily driver. > > > > I change source.list to sid > > $ cat /etc/apt/sources.list > > deb http://ftp.jp.debian.org/debian/ sid main contrib non-free > > deb-src http://ftp.jp.debian.org/debian/ sid main contrib non-free > > > > do the update and upgrade ... > > > > $ sudo apt-get update > > $ sudo apt-get dist-upgrade > > $ sudo apt-get autoremove > > $ sudo reboot > > > > when booted, I checked systemd os-release and debian release still on > > bullseye codename > > > > $ cat /etc/debian_version > > 11.0 > > > > $ cat /etc/os-release > > PRETTY_NAME="Debian GNU/Linux 11 (bullseye)" > > NAME="Debian GNU/Linux" > > VERSION_ID="11" > > VERSION="11 (bullseye)" > > VERSION_CODENAME=bullseye > > ID=debian > > HOME_URL="https://www.debian.org/" > > SUPPORT_URL="https://www.debian.org/support" > > BUG_REPORT_URL="https://bugs.debian.org/" > > > > Hurmm.. that is unexpected, are this is normal or did I missed something? > > > A similar result occurred here: another update/upgrade/reboot sequence > fixed it.
So what does your system print out for the above commands? And what's the version number and date of your base-files….deb that's different from 69992 Apr 10 20:55 base-files_11.1_amd64.deb? Cheers, David.