I'd definitely like this sort of thing. I love Void as a distro, but I can't sanely use a rolling release distribution for my production servers without some kind of safe upgrade path, similar to how Ubuntu snapshots every 6 months. Ideally, support short exist for security updates for a year from a patch level, me thinks. On Monday, April 6, 2015 at 6:16:05 PM UTC-5, bougyman wrote: > > > With the existence of the void daily package archive, I've been bouncing > around an idea about how someone (some admin/architect/enterprise) could > maintain > their own 'stable' release cycle of void. If upon initial configuration > the repos are set to an archive with a date stamp, and the user has a way > to validate that moving > from that datestamp to ### future datestamp doesn't (potentially) break > any functionality, they can safely choose an upgrade path. for instance. > > I install on 2015-03-26 and lock the repository to the archive snapshot of > that date > > on 2015-04-26 I run *magic-command* and ask if upgrading to current > (2015-04-26) would (potentially) break any installed packages. > > I get output about any important breaking changes (to xbps, etc) which may > require an 'upgrade this first' action or 'remove these' actions. > I get output that may just say: 'Upgrade to 2015-04-01 first, then to > 2015-04-15, then 2015-04-26' (or does this automagically?) > > Thoughts? > > bougy >