Debian Trixie
from jcb2016@lemmy.world to linux@lemmy.ml on 12 Aug 06:46
https://lemmy.world/post/34321478

What are your thoughts on Debian trixie ? I’ve been on many distros but never seen so much hype about Debian on mastodon. Currently using void and Mac OS but don’t know what will get me to try trixie when i’ve hopped to Debian so many times

#linux

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beerclue@lemmy.world on 12 Aug 06:57 next collapse

It’s really popular in the server world, and it’s the foundation of many other distros, maybe that’s why?

sirico@feddit.uk on 12 Aug 07:06 next collapse

Debian users tend to just get on with using their computers and don’t make it their personality. Why you’ll only hear from them every 2 years.

nicocool84@sh.itjust.works on 12 Aug 07:26 next collapse

I love Debian stable and use it on most my computers, servers included. I love that it is boring, that potentially breaking updates occur only every release and I usually wait a bit before I apply them. For the rare software where I want (rarely need) a more recent version, there are backports, flatpaks, or sometimes 3rd party repos, or even build-yourself-from-the-README if I’m really in the mood.

Mwa@thelemmy.club on 12 Aug 09:50 collapse

I like the flatpak method just cause Debian uses the same base for 2 Years and easier to get newer programs that need a recent enough base

Xiisadaddy@lemmygrad.ml on 12 Aug 07:38 next collapse

Im running Trixie and have been for a few months now. I switched over back when it was good enough for me but still in testing. Not sure what to say about it. It works. Has lots of software available. Don’t really run into bugs or anything. Updates are quick and easy. Just Debian stuff i guess. I use a laptop thats like 5 years old so i have no need for the bleeding edge support Arch offers, and Debian is just easy.

gnuhaut@lemmy.ml on 12 Aug 07:39 next collapse

It’s like the old Debian but with newer software.

I guess the wayland stuff works ok now. That wasn’t quite ready for the mainstream in the last release.

rjek@feddit.uk on 12 Aug 08:05 next collapse

It’s boring and predictable, which is precisely what I want from a distribution. It also benefits from not being a desktop OS, or a server OS, or an embedded OS, it’s all of those: learning Debian is useful even if you hate it and don’t run it personally because you will encounter it somewhere.

oeuf@slrpnk.net on 12 Aug 08:13 next collapse

It’s great. It’s the most “just works” experience I’ve had with Linux.

procapra@lemmy.ml on 12 Aug 08:41 next collapse

I use Debian as my main distro. Ive played with stable, testing, and unstable over the past few years. I’m confident Trixie is perfectly fine for stable. It looked fine the last few months I used it in testing.

If old stable didn’t impress you, Trixie isn’t gonna be any different. The hype is just because a release happened, we don’t get those in Debian land very often.

drkt@scribe.disroot.org on 12 Aug 09:08 next collapse

I made an in-place upgrade from 12 and it Just Works™

That’s all I care about.

pH3ra@lemmy.ml on 12 Aug 09:16 next collapse

Debian is like retirement on a nice house in the countryside: it’s a predictable life of peace and comfort

pastermil@sh.itjust.works on 12 Aug 10:01 next collapse
jcb2016@lemmy.world on 12 Aug 23:22 collapse

Never heard it that way Lol

bjoern_tantau@swg-empire.de on 12 Aug 11:29 next collapse

<img alt="" src="https://swg-empire.de/pictrs/image/e48ec742-5717-4e15-a7d8-cb33363fee9a.jpeg">

pelya@lemmy.world on 12 Aug 12:03 next collapse

The update from Debian 12 took me four hours. It works. Plasma did not load so I had to clear old configuration files and configure it anew. Plasma on Wayland is actually usable now, and looks stable so far. And I’ve got new wallpapers I’ve so desired.

And now it’s time to forget about OS updates for another two years.

yesman@lemmy.world on 12 Aug 16:50 next collapse

Most of what I know about Trixie is that it was so easy to upgrade that the only configuration I had to fix was changing the clock back to 24hr time.

monovergent@lemmy.ml on 12 Aug 18:28 next collapse

Despite the major version jump, the update just works. One hour to download and install and one hour of housekeeping, but that’s on me for messing with configs most people wouldn’t ever touch and finding a replacement for a deprecated package. New features for me to check out at my leisure, all well-tested with no disruption to my established workflow.

ruuster13@lemmy.zip on 12 Aug 20:52 collapse

That’s so Debian

limelight79@lemmy.world on 12 Aug 20:27 next collapse

Updated my laptop from bookworm this morning. I had to configure dnsmasq, but otherwise it seems fine. (Wait, I think I configured it wrong… It’s okay for home, but name servers could be different if I’m somewhere else. I’ll have to check that.)

gnuplusmatt@reddthat.com on 12 Aug 20:59 next collapse

Its the small window where Debian is relatively modern, in a couple of months it’ll be stale again.

jcb2016@lemmy.world on 12 Aug 23:21 next collapse

Figured!

data1701d@startrek.website on 13 Aug 04:13 collapse

Maybe it’s because I only use stable on my laptop with Flatpaks, but honestly, Bookworm never got that crusty to me until recently - it feels like new software versions didn’t introduce a lot of must have features in the past two years. Only hiccup was I had to install the backports kernel to get Wi-Fi working.

Mwa@thelemmy.club on 12 Aug 21:02 next collapse

I like how you have more Wayland packages

chronicledmonocle@lemmy.world on 13 Aug 01:39 next collapse

I used sed to replace my apt sources.list entries with Trixie…then ran sudo apt update, sudo apt dist-upgrade.

After one reboot my system was updated. Debian is basically that 80 year old tractor on the farm that still starts after sitting for 6 months with no effort. It just works. And that’s why I love it.

Rappe@sopuli.xyz on 13 Aug 05:04 next collapse

Seems nice so far. Wayland works better than in 12, but still has issues with nvidia drivers + KDE Plasma combo. Some software (Signal desktop, discord at least) have a really annoying flickering going on, and toggling Vsync on/off crashes any software that tries it. Swapped to X11 instead, and it works like a charm.

jcb2016@lemmy.world on 13 Aug 06:10 collapse

How do you even swap to x11 when you have Wayland installed? Let me guess there is a way on the internet? Don’t even know why i’m asking Lol

aurorachrysalis@lemmy.ml on 13 Aug 08:10 next collapse

They can both be installed and can be swapped in the log-in session.

meekah@lemmy.world on 13 Aug 09:37 collapse

Even with an DE installed, Linux doesn’t force you to use it. Pressing Ctrl+alt and any of the F-keys is usually configured to switching between sessions. So even if the DE gets stuck and gets fully unresponsive, you can still switch to a different session and access your system through a terminal. Using that terminal you could also install a different DE (or window compositor)

jcb2016@lemmy.world on 13 Aug 09:40 collapse

Thanks

vandsjov@feddit.dk on 13 Aug 13:56 next collapse

I’m still noob when it comes to running Linux. Debian has always been my favourite - just the philosophy behind it, but also the stability and broad usage. First OS book I read fully was on Debian. Then coming to try using Debian, it failed me (some things didn’t work and I couldn’t figure out how to fix it) multiple times. However, Debian 12 was the turning point and Debian 13 seems to work at least as good.

bubbalouie@lemmy.ml on 13 Aug 14:16 collapse

My systems always run Debian, and they always run. Trixie is no different.