On Saturday 15 December 2007 22:28, Daniel Burrows wrote: > On Sat, Dec 15, 2007 at 09:46:58PM +0100, Nigel Henry <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> was heard to say: > > On Wednesday 12 December 2007 20:23, Peter Werner wrote: > > > On Wed, Dec 12, 2007 at 07:44:39PM +0100, Nigel Henry wrote: > > > > How do I prevent the fltk package being upgraded using Apt? > > > > > > put the package on hold. see 6.12 in > > > http://www.debian.org/doc/FAQ/ch-pkg_basics.en.html > > > on how to do this. > > > > > > greetings Peter Werner > > > > Thanks Peter for your reply, and the link. Unfortunately it only deals > > with Aptitude, and Dpkg, and there appears to be no way to put a hold on > > an individual package with Apt ( at least not on the Apt version on > > Fedora). > > Apt and aptitude will read dpkg hold states. > > Daniel
Hi Daniel. I'm sure that's true with Apt, or Aptitude on Debian, but doesn't work with Apt on Fedora. I havn't had to hold back packages on my Debian installs, and this is a specific problem with a version of fltk that comes with Fedora 7, and 8, and causes problems with ZynAddSubFX. Using the fltk version from FC5 resolves the problem. I've already posted this to the list, but these are the lines added to /etc/apt/preferences that have resolved the pinning problem. Package: fltk Pin: version 1.1.7* Pin-Priority: 1001 According to this no fltk versions later than 1.1.7* will be installed if later versions are available. In my case the 1.1.8* versions are causing the problem. Running apt-get dist-upgrade -s verifies that fltk is not going to be upgraded, so the pinning is working thank goodness, as this has been a bit of a performance trying to find the correct lines to enter in /etc/apt/preferences. Thanks to all who replied, even though this wasn't a Debian problem, although Apt is Debian, and I just happen to like using it on Fedora. Nigel. Currently running Debian Sarge, Etch, and Lenny, Kubuntu (Dapper), Archlinux, Fedora 1,2,3,5,6,7, and 8, Slackware 10.0, and Gentoo. btw. I still havn't received a reply for the problem from the Fedora list. they're probably too occupied with Yum to be bothered with Apt. -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]