When trying to install packages for both the 32bit and 64bit powerpc
version of debian sid, it is pretty common to find a situation where the
package can't be installed due to a missing supporting library.

The latest examples I came across were installing vlc, ffmpeg, firefox, and
thunderbird, all of which installed but all of which had several libraries
that couldn't be automatically resolved and required manual intervention.

Adrian already put up an explanation for why this happens.

https://lists.debian.org/debian-sparc/2017/12/msg00060.html

To work around this, I have been going to the snapshot.debian.org web page,
and entering the name of the library package that is needed in the
appropriate search box. That brings up a list of recent snapshots, and
browsing that list has (in most cases) led me to the last ppc or ppc64
version available. I download the deb and install it manually with "dpkg -i
./my_deb.deb" and move on to the next one, until they are all satisfied,
and then the package I want installs.

So far this works, but it's somewhat tedious. There are instructions on the
snapshot.debian.org web page for adding snapshots to the sources.list ,
with an over-ride so they are not considered expired, but I'm not clear on
how that would work exactly. There are dozens and dozens (hundreds, really)
of snapshots. Would one add a snapshot from say a year ago, and ride with
that? Or add multiple snapshots? The logic of how those get used in
sources.list is not clear to me.

What I'm hoping for is that apt will find and use the latest snapshot
version of the needed library on it's own, if that is at all possible,
without my "manual" method being needed.

Thanks, anyone who knows how this is supposed to work.

Ken

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