You are not logged in.

#1 2012-01-05 22:45:14

jaco
Member
From: Toulouse, France
Registered: 2011-03-17
Posts: 149

Arch as a semi-rolling release ? [Solved]

Hi,

I'm considering setting an "old" server  (bi-xeon) for my students in computer science -- mainly to learn programming languages and tools. They only needs to log in via an ssh -Y session from their Windows accounts.

Arch rolling release is perfect for me as it allows to use last versions of programming languages and tools but, for the system itself (kernel and core software) i wonder if i could safely ignore updates of the core set (i prefer to update this component once a year, during student holidays, just in case something goes wrong).

I suppose i could use IgnoreGroup = core in pacman.conf, but i don't know what could be the possible side-effects.

Last edited by jaco (2012-01-07 22:59:33)

Offline

#2 2012-01-05 22:50:52

Allan
Pacman
From: Brisbane, AU
Registered: 2007-06-09
Posts: 11,395
Website

Re: Arch as a semi-rolling release ? [Solved]

No.  That will break.

Offline

#3 2012-01-05 23:01:09

jaco
Member
From: Toulouse, France
Registered: 2011-03-17
Posts: 149

Re: Arch as a semi-rolling release ? [Solved]

Ok, thanks.

Offline

#4 2012-01-06 07:52:16

Awebb
Member
Registered: 2010-05-06
Posts: 6,286

Re: Arch as a semi-rolling release ? [Solved]

You could do as you suggested and let your students fix the server. Perfect training.

Offline

#5 2012-01-06 10:18:41

Cosmin
Member
Registered: 2008-10-06
Posts: 248

Re: Arch as a semi-rolling release ? [Solved]

you could use lts kernel

Offline

#6 2012-01-07 22:51:36

karol
Archivist
Registered: 2009-05-06
Posts: 25,440

Re: Arch as a semi-rolling release ? [Solved]

Please remember to mark the thread as solved.

Offline

Board footer

Powered by FluxBB