On 6/16/07, Andrew Sackville-West <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
while this is annoying, its certainly the least of your problems. In fact, I recommend you purge apt-listbugs until you fix the rest of
OK, I did that. you have a broken package and its been going on for months? that's not
good and could have repercussions throughout the system. eventually these errors could propogate through all kinds of stuff.
It's broken in the sense that it fails to retrieve the bug lists, but I just have ignored that for now. The "proxy" warning is something I have not yet found a fix for. So I just have been bypassing that step in my upgrade regimen.
apt-cache policy libgphoto2
[EMAIL PROTECTED]:~$ apt-cache policy libgphoto2-2 libgphoto2-2: Installed: 2.3.1-5 Candidate: 2.3.1-5 Version table: *** 2.3.1-5 0 500 http://ftp.debian.org testing/main Packages 500 ftp://ftp.it.debian.org testing/main Packages 100 /var/lib/dpkg/status and why do you have libgphoto2-2-dev installed? are you building
stuff?
I was at one point, needed it. Right now, probably not. Again I recommend you remove libgphoto2 and the stuff that depends on
it. You can always reinstall it later. Then you can complete your upgrade.
Well, If I try that, I get output that removing libgphoto2-2 wants to remove digikam (which I use) kamera, kde, and a slew of other things. I know kde is just a metapackage and I can install it later. Maybe that is what I'll do after I get a number of other tasks done first and can manage to get out of X, since removing KDE whilst using it is like pulling out the rug from under oneself :).
kdvi > tetex-extra do you use tetex? specifically, do you use kdvi and tetex-extra? if not, then let them go.
Actually, no I don't. But I can't remove kdvi because of the dependency on kdegraphics (which I use) and that further dependson KDE, so that wants to remove docbook-utils, jadetex, kde & kdegraphics. I have some questions for you:
1. WHich desktop are you using? You've got gnome, kde and xfce installed. If you use them all, great, but if not, you might remove one or more to help clean up this situation. The fewer packages you have to upgrade, the smoother things go.
I use KDE. I have gnome and sfce4 installed - i was experimenting with them, and there are a few things in there I like, but I mainly use KDE as my default desktop environment. I guess I have gnome in there because when I did a first install of etch/testing a long time ago, it automatically installed gnome. 2. You say you were running etch before, when it was in testing, but
when was this? When did you start running etch? The reason I ask is etch had been very stable and usable for quite a while before the move
I had run it since roughly November 2005, after migrating to debian from Mandrake and through mepis. I installed the system initially with a jigdo snapshot. I've been doing upgrades periodically since then. Mostly it works just fine - although the xserver-xfree86 to xserver-xorg transition didn't work positively well. Once etch went stable I figured I'd sit and wait. I asked for advice from some people on another mailing list, and some people opted for stable and others (including some comments in debian-user) said to wait a bit. Well, I waited maybe 6 weeks I guess (etch went stable in the second week of April, and I moved in the second week of May, and finally resolved my bandwidth situation about two weeks later). 3. How do you normally upgrade your system? In testing and unstable,
you should routinely be running dist-upgrades. There is a lot of
I had mostly done aptitude update && aptitude upgrade, mostly once a week when I was running etch/testing. Once in a while doing a dist-upgrade helped something.
A