Andris Kalnozols <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > lpans1# dpkg -l | grep kernel-image > ii kernel-image-2 2.4.23-1 Linux kernel image for version 2.4.23 on PPr > ii kernel-image-2 2.4.24-2 Linux kernel image for version 2.4.24 on PPr ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
Note that the package name is truncated with "dpkg -l" (cf. dpkg-query...). > lpans1# apt-get upgrade > Reading Package Lists... Done > Building Dependency Tree... Done > The following packages will be upgraded: > console-common console-data console-tools ddd gettext gettext-base > gettext-el kernel-image-2.4.24-1-686-smp libconsole libgphoto2-2 > ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ [...] > Why is apt-get now bringing in kernel-image packages and needlessly so > since I already have the indicated version installed? What you underlined is the package _name_, not version. If you want to know the versions, you can use "dpkg -l kernel-image-2.4.24-1-686-smp" or "dpkg -s kernel-image-2.4.24-1-686-smp", for the installed version, "apt-cache show kernel-image-2.4.24-1-686-smp" for the available version, or do all this in dselect. What apt wants to do here is an upgrade of the kernel-image-2.4.24-1-686-smp package (presumably a security update, given the recent events). What will not happen automatically is an upgrade from a 2.4.24 kernel to a 2.4.25 kernel for instance. These are provided by two different packages. -- Florent