as a followup to something i asked earlier, i was curious about whether it was safe to clean older versions of packages off of a system i'm currently upgrading. (i inherited this system, so i don't have a full history of how it got to be how it is.)
more specifically about those packages with multiple versions, most of them are, in fact, library packages. working from memory, there were quite a few lib packages that had two versions installed, a small number with three or more. is that normal? for comparison purposes, i'm looking at a fully-updated lenny system right now, and i see not a single example of a lib package for which multiple versions are installed, which is what i would expect. so i guess the question is, under *normal* circumstances, if one sticks with nothing but the stable packages, and does nothing but normal upgrades, is there *any* reason for a system to end up with multiple versions of packages? particularly library packages? i would have thought that, under normal processing, lib packages and their reverse dependencies would stay in sync as one kept upgrading. are there curcumstances under which that would *not* be the case? because my plan is to, for all of those older lib packages, use "apt-cache rdepends" to see who cares about it and, if no one, purge it. i see no reason to hang onto useless packages, if they are in fact useless. rday -- ======================================================================== Robert P. J. Day Waterloo, Ontario, CANADA Linux Consulting, Training and Annoying Kernel Pedantry. Web page: http://crashcourse.ca Twitter: http://twitter.com/rpjday ======================================================================== -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-user-requ...@lists.debian.org with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org