On Fri, Jul 31, 2009 at 8:54 AM, Jean-Baptiste Mestelan<mestelan@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > 2009/7/30 Ken Restivo <ken@xxxxxxxxxxx> >>Linux audio stuff moves fast, and works better with rolling releases, > > This was also the point made in a recent thread ('Audio distribution > proposal') ; I bought the idea enough to give ArchLinux + > archaudio.repo a try. And this worked pleasantly well : in a few > hours' time, I could set up a fast and lean system, with good > performance for the main audio apps. > > Still, a few updates later, I got to think again about this 'rollling' > model : does the constant upgrading not mean that you are constantly > introducing instability into your system ? In my opinion it depends on the number of folks running the distro and the process the distro maintainers use to release new packages. If maintainers rubber stamp anything that appears on their source code doorstep as stable then I suspect end-users see problems. On the other hand, if the distro has a large enough install base, and then within that install base enough people running the new/testing packages, then after some period of time without leading edge users reporting problems the testing code moves to stable and folks running stable don't see too many problems. I suspect that Arch is similar to Gentoo in the sense that you choose what sort of system to run, and then if you run stable you can probably pick individual testing packages? On my Gentoo machines I run the system as close to pure stable as I can and then only unmask the few Linux Audio apps I want to run leading edge on. It reduces the amount of time I spend building system software and keeps me focused on audio testing versions.. - Mark _______________________________________________ Linux-audio-user mailing list Linux-audio-user@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx http://lists.linuxaudio.org/mailman/listinfo/linux-audio-user