Hello, Marcin Owsiany wrote: > | - making local changes to the official version. In this case, the most > | reliable way is to make the version string sort as older than the > | official one (using the "tilde" feature of dpkg) and force > | installation of such package using pinning. (The other strategy: > | trying to invent a version string newer than the current one, but > | older than the next one is difficult to do reliably.)
In that case, a solution that comes to my mind is to use the Forbid feature of aptitude: you install the locally-modified version and forbid the version currently in stable. This way, aptitude won't install it, but it will upgrade to a later version if there is one. Of course, you'll still have to prepare a new version based on the new one, but at least, you'll notice there is an upgrade available. Cheers, Vincent -- Vincent Fourmond, Debian Developer http://vince-debian.blogspot.com/ It was funny how people were people everywhere you went, even if the people concerned weren't the people the people who made up the phrase ``people are people everywhere'' had traditionally thought of as people. -- Terry Pratchet, The Fifth Elephant Vincent, listening to Darlene (Led Zeppelin) -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]