On 07/11/2021 10:35, Steve Fairhead wrote:

That's what I'd expect, and I did indeed run sysupgrade without specific options. Nonetheless I seem to have wound up with -current when I would have expected -stable:

# dmesg | grep OpenBSD
OpenBSD 6.9-stable (GENERIC.MP) #0: Mon Aug 23 21:44:18 BST 2021
OpenBSD 6.9-stable (GENERIC.MP) #0: Sun Oct 31 10:03:46 GMT 2021
OpenBSD 6.9-stable (GENERIC.MP) #0: Sun Oct 31 10:03:46 GMT 2021
OpenBSD 7.0-current (RAMDISK_CD) #71: Fri Nov  5 10:13:26 MDT 2021
OpenBSD 7.0-current (GENERIC.MP) #72: Fri Nov  5 10:08:43 MDT 2021
OpenBSD 7.0-stable (GENERIC.MP) #0: Sat Nov  6 13:30:45 GMT 2021
OpenBSD 7.0-stable (GENERIC.MP) #0: Sat Nov  6 16:15:08 GMT 2021
OpenBSD 7.0-stable (GENERIC.MP) #0: Sat Nov  6 19:53:47 GMT 2021

I have no idea how this can have happened. I would dearly love to understand what I did wrong.

I *finally* figured out what happened, after some experimenting with a spare machine. Running sysupgrade with no parameters on -stable (i.e. -release + patches, rebuilt) upgrades to a snapshot (i.e. -current).

Is this expected behaviour?

Again, apologies if this is obvious to everyone but me ;) .

Steve

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          Steve Fairhead
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