homemsemnome
(usa Debian)
Enviado em 13/03/2017 - 14:32h
bilufe escreveu:
O mesmo ocorre com o Debian e Kali, se o Debian tem tal bug, o Kali também o terá.
Interessante notar também que se o Ubuntu possuir determinado bug, a chance do Debian também o possuir é grande (visto que o Ubuntu faz a importação de pacotes do Debian).
Deixe de espalhar desinformação! O Kali Linux e o Ubuntu drenam pacotes dos repositórios
testing e/ou
unstable do Debian, sendo que também existem
modificações em determinados softwares feitas por eles. Não é porque a porr* toda é bugada no Ubuntu que no Debian também será assim.
The Kali Linux distribution is based on Debian Testing. Therefore, most of the Kali packages are imported, as-is, from the Debian repositories. In some cases, newer packages may be imported from Debian Unstable or Debian Experimental, either to improve user experience, or to incorporate needed bug fixes.
Forked Packages
In order to implement some of Kali’s unique features, we had to fork some packages. The Kali development team strives to keep such packages to a minimum by improving the upstream packages whenever possible, either by integrating the feature directly, or by adding the required hooks so that it’s straightforward to enable the desired features without further modifying the upstream packages themselves.
Each package forked by Kali is maintained in a Git repository with a “debian” branch so that updating a forked package can be easily done with a simple git merge debian in its master branch.
http://docs.kali.org/policy/kali-linux-relationship-with-debian
Ubuntu packages are based on packages from Debian's unstable branch. Both distributions use Debian's deb package format and package management tools (APT and Ubuntu Software Center). Debian and Ubuntu packages are not necessarily binary compatible with each other, however; packages may need to be rebuilt from source to be used in Ubuntu.[26] Many Ubuntu developers are also maintainers of key packages within Debian. Ubuntu cooperates with Debian by pushing changes back to Debian,[27] although there has been criticism that this does not happen often enough. Ian Murdock, the founder of Debian, had expressed concern about Ubuntu packages potentially diverging too far from Debian to remain compatible.[28]
Before release, packages are imported from Debian unstable continuously and merged with Ubuntu-specific modifications. One month before release, imports are frozen, and packagers then work to ensure that the frozen features interoperate well together.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ubuntu_(operating_system)#Package_classification_and_support
Na boa, eu espero que isso seja mera ignorância da sua parte, porque é muita canalhice distorcer os fatos para favorecer o seu "Deus". Seria vergonhoso ver um adulto fazer algo do gênero.