Gregory Guthrie wrote: > > I an trying to install a new package (NTFS) which requires libc6; so I got > the libc6 package, and tried to install it. Dselect reports that: > > NTFS depends on libc6, libc6 conflicts with lib5, libc5 is required by > many-many other things, so it wants to uninstall a huge list of things. > > I have seen bunched of discussions on the list about library upgrades, but > ignored them, as I was trying to make my life simple by sticking with the > stable (1.0.31 CD) distribution. I did upgrade to the .30 kernel from the > CDROM. > > Recommendations? > > Thanks, > > Gregory Guthrie > [EMAIL PROTECTED] >
Well, if you want to continue keeping your life simple, you'd better not proceed any further, because upgrading from libc5 to libc6 is not a simple or quick affair (this is the primary difference between 1.3.1 and 2.0). :-) To do what you want requires a library switch. I don't believe you can install libc6 without upgrading the rest of your system to use it, i.e., libc6 can't be a 'secondary' library while allowing libc5 to be the 'primary' one. It can work the other way around though. You can have libc6 as 'primary' and have libc5 for those programs that still need it. If you have the time, you can begin the upgrade with the autoup shell script from debian.org (look for the "Developer's Corner"), and upgrade only essential packages while keeping libc5 on hand for the rest. -- Ed -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]