Describe the bug

debian bullseye repo does not contain latest redis version (7.2.7 or 7.4.2)

This version is still supported on Debian Side in LTS mode - cf https://endoflife.date/debian

To reproduce

sudo apt-cache madison redis-server | head
redis-server | 6:7.4.1-1rl1~bullseye1 | https://packages.redis.io/deb bullseye/main amd64 Packages
redis-server | 6:7.4.0-1rl1~bullseye1 | https://packages.redis.io/deb bullseye/main amd64 Packages
redis-server | 6:7.2.6-1rl1~bullseye1 | https://packages.redis.io/deb bullseye/main amd64 Packages

Expected behavior

Latest version of redis should be available.

Additional information

Debian 11.11 up to date.

Comment From: chrisls121

Version 7.4.2 or 7.2.7 is not available for Ubuntu 24.04 (Noble) either.

Comment From: adamiBs

Please check again

Comment From: nsteinmetz

@adamiBs still the issue

For debian:11

apt-cache madison redis-server | head
redis-server | 6:7.4.1-1rl1~bullseye1 | https://packages.redis.io/deb bullseye/main amd64 Packages
redis-server | 6:7.4.0-1rl1~bullseye1 | https://packages.redis.io/deb bullseye/main amd64 Packages
redis-server | 6:7.2.6-1rl1~bullseye1 | https://packages.redis.io/deb bullseye/main amd64 Packages

For debian:12

apt-cache madison redis-server | head 
redis-server | 6:7.4.2-1rl1~bookworm1 | https://packages.redis.io/deb bookworm/main arm64 Packages
redis-server | 6:7.4.1-1rl1~bookworm1 | https://packages.redis.io/deb bookworm/main arm64 Packages
redis-server | 6:7.4.0-1rl1~bookworm1 | https://packages.redis.io/deb bookworm/main arm64 Packages
redis-server | 6:7.2.7-1rl1~bookworm1 | https://packages.redis.io/deb bookworm/main arm64 Packages
redis-server | 6:7.2.6-1rl1~bookworm1 | https://packages.redis.io/deb bookworm/main arm64 Packages

bookworm repo is up to date but bullseye repo is not.

Comment From: adamiBs

Oh gotcha, we encourage usage of bookworm, bullseye is no longer in Debian Security Support mode so we haven't published the versions for that version.

Comment From: nsteinmetz

I see your point but Debian bullseye is still in LTS mode till summer 2026 - https://wiki.debian.org/LTS/ or https://endoflife.date/debian

So if you limit your support policy to "Debian Security Support", I would recommend that it's documented somewhere. I thought about this hypothesis when opening the issue but I couldn't find any element in favour or against it.