Peter Milesson
2023-Sep-05 17:20 UTC
[Samba] Which sub version of Samba 4.19 will be considered for Debian bookworm-backports?
Hi folks, I'm just curious about which subversion of Samba 4.19 that will trickle down to Debian bookworm-backports? I have a hunch I saw a note from either Rowland or Louis van Belle quite a few years back on this list, that the .0 and .1, and possibly .2 versions of Samba, are not considered stable enough for production. Please, correct me if I have got it wrong. Otherwise it would be interesting to know, as I plan integration with Microsoft Azure later this year. What I understand, Microsoft has changed the requirements to at least AD forest level 2016 for that integration, while previously 2008R2 was sufficient. Best regards, Peter
Rowland Penny
2023-Sep-05 17:50 UTC
[Samba] Which sub version of Samba 4.19 will be considered for Debian bookworm-backports?
On Tue, 5 Sep 2023 19:20:17 +0200 Peter Milesson via samba <samba at lists.samba.org> wrote:> Hi folks, > > I'm just curious about which subversion of Samba 4.19 that will > trickle down to Debian bookworm-backports? > > I have a hunch I saw a note from either Rowland or Louis van Belle > quite a few years back on this list, that the .0 and .1, and > possibly .2 versions of Samba, are not considered stable enough for > production. Please, correct me if I have got it wrong.It was Louis that said that he didn't use '.0' & '.1' minor Samba versions in production and I said something like 'I don't use the .0 versions', but that was a long time ago and was after there had been a couple of major releases that had had problems, these problems do not seem to happen now and I am quite willing to use any supported Samba versions, this includes '.0' & '.1' versions.> > Otherwise it would be interesting to know, as I plan integration with > Microsoft Azure later this year. What I understand, Microsoft has > changed the requirements to at least AD forest level 2016 for that > integration, while previously 2008R2 was sufficient.I have no idea if 4.19.x will go into Bookworm-backports and I also do not think that Samba has any pull on this. The person who may know is Michael Tokarev, the Debian Samba maintainer. Rowland
Michael Tokarev
2023-Sep-05 18:37 UTC
[Samba] Which sub version of Samba 4.19 will be considered for Debian bookworm-backports?
05.09.2023 20:20, Peter Milesson via samba ?????:> Hi folks, > > I'm just curious about which subversion of Samba 4.19 that will trickle down to Debian bookworm-backports? > > I have a hunch I saw a note from either Rowland or Louis van Belle quite a few years back on this list, that the .0 and .1, and possibly .2 versions > of Samba, are not considered stable enough for production. Please, correct me if I have got it wrong. > > Otherwise it would be interesting to know, as I plan integration with Microsoft Azure later this year. What I understand, Microsoft has changed the > requirements to at least AD forest level 2016 for that integration, while previously 2008R2 was sufficient.?Patience you must have, my young Padawan. Have patience and all will be revealed." You're asking a wrong question by now. As you might have noticed, I already uploaded 4.19.0 to unstable. Unlike with all previous releases in debian which were uploaded to experimental first, due to a number of reasons, and were faced unstable at release .1 or up only. I'm not saying 4.19 is more stable than experimental, but let's give it a try in unstable first and see how it goes. Next we can decide if it's okay to have 4.19.0 in bookworm- backports or it will be 4.19.10. If you really want 4.19.0 on bookqworm or even bullseye *now* to try freshest functionality, you can grab binaries from my repository - it has 4.19.0 since yesterday. Just don't forget to switch to bpo12 once version wanted by you is in there. /mjt