On Monday 04 June 2012 09:05, in alt.os.linux.slackware,
PaulB...@gmail.com wrote:
> A few days ago, I used slackpkg to upgrade to slackware-current from
> 13.37, which had been installed from CDs. When I `cat
> /etc/slackware-version`, it still reports that slackware 13.37 is
> installed. Is this correct, given that I'm now running -current?
Yes, sort of.
Remember, "current" is Pat's working area, his transition area from the most
recent Slackware release and the /next/ Slackware release. It is not
guaranteed to be stable or consistant (as a release) until PV
actually "releases" it. As "current", it is /not/ a Slackware "release",
but an unreleased "work in progress".
The contents of /etc/slackware-version are maintained by the aaa-base
package, which is one of the last packages that PV updates when he releases
a new version of Slackware. In the current "current" package tree, the
aaa-base package is still the one from the Slackware 13.37 release.
/Until/ that new version is released, the aaa-base package in current
usually contains the slackware-version file from the /previous/ version of
Slackware. And, so, if you "upgrade" your Slackware installation
from "current", you get the slackware-version of the last official release.
HTH
--
Lew Pitcher