@wandenwelterer

Klar funzt es.

Aber hat auch Nachteile.

Ist langsamer als ein installiertes.
Du musst Dich selber um Updates kümmern.

Wenn du #Debian nutzt, sollte man besser #backports nutzen.

Hilft Dir aber in deinem Fall gerade nicht.

Debian Stable's Hidden Power: The Backports Blessing

https://watch.linuxrenaissance.com/w/tkegkHx1uLcJLTgtDrFffK

Debian Stable's Hidden Power: The Backports Blessing

PeerTube
What's new for .NET in Ubuntu 26.04 - .NET Blog

Ubuntu 26.04 (Resolute Raccoon) ships today with .NET 10. Here's how to install .NET 10 from the archive, use the new -resolute container tags, build Native AOT apps, and install .NET 8 and 9 from the dotnet-backports PPA.

.NET Blog

[Stéphane HUC :: IT Log] nous offre un article à-propos de Debian : Extrepo : gestion des dépôts Debian externes

- https://doc.huc.fr.eu.org/fr/sys/debian/extrepo/

#Debian #backports #stable

**[Stéphane HUC :: IT Log]** nous offre un article à-propos deux articles à-propos de Debian :

- **Debian Fast Track**: http://doc.huc.fr.eu.org/fr/sys/debian/fast-track/

- **Fast Forward Debian**: http://doc.huc.fr.eu.org/fr/sys/debian/fast-forward/

#Debian #depots #backports

OK, just found about #fastforward on #Debian. Can someone explain the difference to #backports

I'm constantly having trouble discovering what #debian's #security story is supposed to be.

They claim updates keep secure, except #backports doesn't give any guarantees for security. But then you have package 'tor": updates provide old version with risks, while backports provide up-to-date version.

#AppArmor is provided but most profiles aren't up-to-date so enforcing is risky. Ubuntu restricts unprivileged-unconfined apps to prevent unnecessarily exposing some vulnerabilities. Debian doesn't

For all the little guys who want to have their infrastructure under control, I would like to inform you that I took the trouble to compile the Zabbix installation packages for the 32-bit #ARM, i.e. for the Raspberry PI2

No one will probably use the Zabbix server on such weak hardware, but the Zabbix proxy works on my RPi2 with 1Gb of ram without any problems, so I can imagine that it could work for someone else too.

So if you need to monitor, like me, a /26 network and don't want to dedicate a gluttonous old PC to it or speculate on which virtual machine to use, reach for your good old Raspberry and give it a new purpose and life.

Configuration for Ansible Role:

zabbix_version: 8.0

zabbix_repo_deb_url: https://repo.vitexsoftware.com/

zabbix_repo_deb_gpg_key_url: http://repo.vitexsoftware.com/KEY.gpg

zabbix_repo_deb_component: 'backports'

zabbix_repo_deb_include_deb_src: false

#Zabbix 8.0 packages for #Debian 13 #Trixie #armhf

http://repo.vitexsoftware.cz/pool/backports/z/zabbix/

#RaspberryPi #Arm32 #Backports

Index of /pool/backports/z/zabbix