Hello everyone! It’s been about a month that I’m experimenting Debian on an external disk. For the most time, I’ve been using Testing. The issue is, that some packages are missing from Testing, while they exist on Stable (or on Unstable). The biggest problem with that is that some packages require dependencies that don’t exist on the Testing repo and as such I can’t install those apps.

So, I thought about adding the Stable repo, at a lower priority. If something doesn’t exist on Testing, it will grab it from Stable.

How bad is that approach? I’m not doing the reverse (using stable and grabbing apps from testing), which might be way worse. Does anyone else do that? I couldn’t find anything related online.

PS. I’m a bit tempted to switch to Unstable all together, but I don’t know if I’ll be careful enough to use it in the long run.

PPS. I might build a home nas at some point (with Debian Stable) and keep regular backups of my laptop so that I’ll be kinda safe if I ever switch to Unstable.

  • @anamethatisnt
    link
    110 hours ago

    You could always go for a Debian stable host as long as it supports your hardware and then use kvm/qemu to run virtual distros and see which one fits you the best.

    • Blastboom StriceOP
      link
      fedilink
      19 hours ago

      I still havent transitioned to debian (still have win10 as main), I’m just booting to them from an external drive, so I can simply wipe the root partition any time I want to try a distro :)

      Once I settle with a distro and manage to set it up the way I want, I will probably fully switch to linux (and maybe keep an image of my win10 os to run in a vm)