Hi, Congratulations! You have just introduced a subtle bug on your system. It may work, and possibly never cause a problem, but there is a bomb ticking away, waiting to explode ;-)
There is a reason there is a versioned dependency for libc6-dev. The reasons are explained in a libc6-dev FAQ. I have also posted it in a related document. I think I have changed my mind. I think libc6 should really get a package all its own, called libc6-kernel-headers. I do not know whether I can push it into 2.0, but I shall try. All this silly snipping of links and upgrading to incompatible headers may cease then. manoj >>"Rev" == Rev Joseph Carter <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: Rev> [1 <text/plain; us-ascii (7bit)>] On Sun, Apr 12, 1998 at Rev> 03:42:12PM -0600, Tamas Papp wrote: >> My problem was that I couldn't not substitute kernel-headers-2.0.32 >> with kernel-headers-2.0.33 in the sense that libc6-dev depends on >> the former but it doesn't accept the latter instead, so my problem >> was a dependency problem. Rev> I deleted the 2.0.32 headers and symlinks, then just changed the Rev> symlinks to inside /usr/src/linux/, which seemed to make a few Rev> probrams happier when compiling. I have to fix these symlinks Rev> everytime I unstall new libc6-dev and naturally I have to make Rev> sure /usr/src/linux is linked to something useful (at the moment Rev> /usr/src/kernel/linux which is in turn linked to Rev> /usr/src/kernel/linux-2.1.95--aren't symlinks fun?) Rev> Why the extra kernel dir? I use kernel-package which puts a Rev> kernel-image .deb in the dir above the kernel directory, which is Rev> normally /usr/src by most conventions. This behavior is Rev> undesirable to me, so I place all my package-related things in Rev> subdirs, .orig.tar.gz, .diff.gz, .dsc, .deb, and the source code. Rev> This idea came from the qmail-src package before I started Rev> rebuilding packages for my own needs (I can build a fresh package Rev> but it's a very slow process since I do not yet know all the Rev> tools to make it easier) so I suppose I've kinda done it since I Rev> started doing things this way, but. -- At West Point, the cadets had been full of bravado...But bravado was grounded in ignorance; true courage was possible only after one gained the visceral comprehension that death was the potential price of valor. Rick Atkinson, _The Long Grey Line_ Manoj Srivastava <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> <http://www.datasync.com/%7Esrivasta/> Key C7261095 fingerprint = CB D9 F4 12 68 07 E4 05 CC 2D 27 12 1D F5 E8 6E -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]