On Sun, Dec 05, 2021 at 10:19:44AM -0500, pkgoyq....@neverbox.com wrote: > > > > You should remove them manually in postrm, but only on > > > > purge. > > > > > But now you will need to also recover from a bad state > > left by upgrades to 1.5.7-1. > > Ah... it is getting more and more complicated. Nobody would be able to > upgrade to 1.5.7-1 normally, so it is OK to use next good version as > the fix please? Are you asking whether you can assume that no system had 1.5.01-1 and then 1.5.7-1 installed, because in that cause it would be impossible to have 1.5.7-1 configured? That's probably a valid assumption, though I don't think what can you assume about systems that tried to update to 1.5.7-1 and then were rolled back in some unknown way.
> Else, all the upgrade related problems can be easily fixed by purging > the old version, and installing a brand new version. I don't think you can assume this is what was done though. Downgrading to the version from testing and pinning it is also a valid way to make the apt state consistent again. > > > How to do that please? > > The correct way, it seems, would be to follow the suggestion in the > > original bug report and fix the "rm -f /etc/dnsmasq.d/dbab.*" line in > > the 1.3.3-1 postrm. > > I still don't quite understand what you actually mean, I just mean the original bug report already had a suggestion that seems correct to me. -- WBR, wRAR
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