![]() While Mailman has been further sub-divided into components. At the moment of writing, both python2 and python3 are supported in Debian buster. So Python developers are encouraged to move their code-base to be compatible with Python 3. This may happen either at Buster release or in a future point release but this is imminent. While Debian does have Python 2.7 efforts are on to remove after moving all packages to Python 3 to remove it from the repo. Support will be out-of-the box for RISC-V systems as well. There is support for Rock 64, Banana Pi M2 Berry, Pine A64 LTS Board, Olimex A64 Teres-1 as well as Raspberry Pi 1, Zero and Pi 3. There has been a constant stream of new SBC boards which Debian is supporting, the latest amongst these are pine64_plus, pinebook for ARM64, while Firefly-RK3288, u-boot-rockchip for ARMHF 64 as well as Odroid HC1/HC2 boards, SolidRun Cubox-i Dual/Quad (1.5som), and SolidRun Cubox-i Dual/Quad (1.5som+emmc) boards, Cubietruckplus as well. Support for lot of ARM 64 and ARMHF SBC Boards. NFtables replaces iptablesĭebian buster provides nftables as a full replacement to iptables which means better and easier syntax, better support for dual-stack ipv4-v6 firewalls and more. Of course, you can install latest Nodejs in Debian from the project’s repository but it’s good to see newer version in Debian repository. In fact, Debian Buster has many javascript libraries such as yarnpkg (an npm alternative) and many others. In this cycle Debian has moved to Nodejs 10.15.2. Nodejs 10.15.2įor a long time Debian had Nodejs 4.8 in the repo. This is only the first step and would need fixing probably lot of scripts to be as useful as been envisioned for the user. ![]() While this is a good thing, care would have to be taken care by system administrators to enable correct policies. In Debian Buster, AppArmor will be enabled by default. Now in Debian Buster we have moved to OpenJDK 11.0 and have a team which will take care of new versions. You can check Linux kernel version: $ uname -rįor a long time Debian was stuck on OpenJDK 8.0. Linux Kernel 4.19.0-4ĭebian uses LTS Kernel versions so you can expect much better hardware support and long 5 year maintainance and support cycle from Debian. The big move has been all packages being moved from libgtk2+ to libgtk3+. Some of the new packages included in this GNOME desktop release are gnome-todo, tracker instead of tracker-gui, dependency against gstreamer1.0-packagekit so there is automatic codec installation for playing movies etc. The GNOME desktop which was 1.3.22 in Debian Stretch is updated to 1.3.30 in Buster.
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