On Du, 27 ian 13, 13:39:29, Ralf Mardorf wrote: > > However, Debian tends to completely break production environments, > if you update.
You are of course aware that when you talk about "production" with Debian this means stable. > I used Debian because it was said, that I'm not > forced to use pulseaudio, that was correct, for two days, then I > updated and got pulseaudio as a hard dependency, without a warning, > there were no changelogs about this issue, that did break audio > completely. This wasn't the only issue ;). This sounds more like testing or unstable. Two hints for you (and the archives): 1. *always* check carefully what the update process is planing to do (even on stable) 2. If you really, really what to prevent a package from being installed you have to configure your system accordingly. For example create a file /etc/apt/preferences.d/no-pulseaudio with following contents: Package: pulseaudio Pin: version * Pin-Priority: -1 Explanation: prevent installation of pulseaudio Kind regards, Andrei -- Offtopic discussions among Debian users and developers: http://lists.alioth.debian.org/mailman/listinfo/d-community-offtopic
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