In <90bb445a0907071607k26d7720fwf19c65e91c501...@mail.gmail.com>, Akira Kitada wrote: >Hi list, >I use Lenny for my workstation, where I try new cutting-edge software. > >My solution for this is easy and typical. Building from source and put >it on /usr/local. >That way, I can keep stable system while using the latest software. >However, it didn't take so long to make /usr/local a mess. >There's no easy way to track what I've installed because they're >installed manually. >It'd be nice if I could manage those software with apt but I suppose >that might conflicts with ones Lenny provides. > >So here's my question. How can you manage new softwares while keeping >the system stable? >Using packages from backports.org or Sid? Do you build .deb packages > yourself? Can you keep the Lenny's intact?
http://www.iguanasuicide.net/node/4 You can choose the version from backports, testing, sid, or experimental through the aptitude curses interface, or by using 'aptitude install -t $release $packages' or 'aptitude install $package=$version'. If Sid/experimental doesn't contain a new enough package for you, find it is some other signed repository, add it to your sources.list, set a priority (200 maybe?) for it, and add the signing key to your apt keychain. If it isn't in any signed repository, just install a .deb using dpkg, or an .rpm via alien. If you *have* to compile to software yourself, roll your own .deb; it's not that hard to make a minimal one so that the software can be easily uninstalled and file conflicts can be detected. -- Boyd Stephen Smith Jr. ,= ,-_-. =. b...@iguanasuicide.net ((_/)o o(\_)) ICQ: 514984 YM/AIM: DaTwinkDaddy `-'(. .)`-' http://iguanasuicide.net/ \_/
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