On Tue, Jun 10, 2008 at 05:35:18PM -0500, Aaron Hall <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> was heard to say: > My sid box has cupsys and xpdf-utils installed (among a bunch of other > things). When I run "aptitude safe-upgrade", aptitude runs through its > normal prep, followed by many lines of "Resolving dependencies...", > followed by: > > The following packages have unmet dependencies: > xpdf-utils: Conflicts: poppler-utils but 0.8.2-2 is to be installed. > poppler-utils: Conflicts: xpdf-utils but 3.02-1.3 is installed. > > Then it exits. I can tell xpdf-utils and poppler-utils conflict; fine. > But xpdf-utils is already installed, poppler-utils is not. I thought > aptitude would normally let the already-installed xpdf-utils fulfill the > dependency and ignore poppler-utils. But it's not. So I thought that > something else might be trying to pull poppler-utils in, but:
I ran into this on my own computer recently. Unfortunately, it's not trivial to solve. The problem came up because of an interaction between the code to remove unused packages and the code to resolve dependencies: if a package is installed that requires something being removed because it's unused, the unused package will be put back on the system. That's fine, but the resolver doesn't know that, and so it produces a solution that breaks dependencies after it's applied. Of course, now that I've written that, it occurs to me that I might be able to get away with just deferring the removal of unused packages until after all the dependencies are resolved. That won't solve the problem in general, but it will probably make things better in this case. (I guess the one possible drawback would be something where both A and B could hold C on the system, upgrading B pulls in C, but B itself is unused after the upgrade, so C would be installed for no obvious reason -- but that's probably a better result than breaking) I think this can be solved properly, for good, but it'll require somewhat more thought and work. Anyway, for now you can try a full-upgrade when this happens. Another option is to temporarily disable the removal of unused packages by running aptitude -o "Aptitude::Delete-Unused=false" safe-upgrade and then running "aptitude install", which *should* clear out any unused packages (if not, they'll be removed next time you do anything). I've only seen this in the last week or two, and I'm not sure why; as far as I can tell, there's nothing that would have prevented this from cropping up any time in the last few years. Daniel -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]