From 04f4aa2539b3e034a677ebbbacb55b41c1c7d4e4 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Philip Hands Date: Tue, 31 Jan 2023 10:52:51 +0100 Subject: minor nitpicking --- en/hardware/hardware-supported.xml | 8 ++++---- 1 file changed, 4 insertions(+), 4 deletions(-) (limited to 'en') diff --git a/en/hardware/hardware-supported.xml b/en/hardware/hardware-supported.xml index fa536dceb..fb135e6c9 100644 --- a/en/hardware/hardware-supported.xml +++ b/en/hardware/hardware-supported.xml @@ -364,18 +364,18 @@ In most cases firmware is non-free according to the criteria used by the If the device driver itself is included in the distribution and if &debian-gnu; legally can distribute the firmware, it will often be available as a separate package from the non-free-firmware section -of the archive (non-free before &debian-gnu; 12.0). +of the archive (prior to &debian-gnu; 12.0: from the non-free section). However, this does not mean that such hardware cannot be used during -an installation. Starting with &debian-gnu; 12.0, following the 2022 General Resolution about non-free firmware, official installation images can include non-free firmware packages. By default, &d-i; will -detect required firmware (based on kernel logs and based on modalias +detect required firmware (based on kernel logs and modalias information), and install the relevant packages if they are found on -installation images (e.g. on the netinst). The package manager gets +an installation medium (e.g. on the netinst). The package manager gets automatically configured with the matching components so that those packages get security updates. This usually means that the non-free-firmware component gets enabled, in addition to main. -- cgit v1.2.3