This one time, at band camp, Jeff Carr said: > Unless I'm doing something wrong, I'm still having to rebuild orbit0 in > sid to get evolution to work with a 2.5 kernel. The one line patch (in > the bug report) to the orbit sources works for me. Anyway, my question > is seems that sometimes(1) when I run apt-get update & apt-get upgrade > it seems to re-install the current broken Nov 4th orbit 0.5.17-4 > packages from /var/cache/apt/archives/. I used apt-src to install and > build the packages with the patch and then I install them with dpkg -i. > Is there a more correct way to maintain my own repository? Should I use > apt-build instead of apt-src perhaps? (As I noticed that it creates it's > own entry in /etc/apt/sources) > > Jeff When I do this sort of thing on my local mirror, I usually pretend it's an NMU - so your package would be 0.5.17-4.1 or something. This prevents apt from preferring the Debian distributed pakage over yours. Either that or you can use pinning to give your local repository a higher preference.
-- -------------------------------------------------------------------------- | Stephen Gran | There's no use in having a dog and | | [EMAIL PROTECTED] | doing your own barking. | | http://www.lobefin.net/~steve | | --------------------------------------------------------------------------
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