Csanyi Pal wrote: > I have installed vuze on my Debian GNU/Linux 7.0 (wheezy) system. > > My sources.list is: > > deb-src http://ftp.debian.org/debian/ sid main contrib non-free > deb http://ftp.debian.org/debian/ sid main contrib non-free
That looks like Sid, not Wheezy. Unless you take special care by pinning your system is a Sid system. > I have installed vuze but I can't to use it. I reported a bug here: > http://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=%23700090 > > I want to follow advice of Michael Gilbert: > > "You have a mix of deb-multimedia packages, which often leads to > problems. Please try to reproduce this on a clean installation." > > So I change my sources.list: > > deb http://www.deb-multimedia.org sid main > #deb http://www.deb-multimedia.org testing main > > and did aptitude update and upgrade. You cannot change your sources and then call it a clean installation. (At least not if you are asking how to do it.) The way to do a clean installation is to do a clean installation. A clean installation in a chroot with debootstrap should be acceptable. That is my typical way of doing things. The problem is that packages outside of the official Debian repository will have a later version numbers. The apt upgrade tools will determine that the system is up to date based upon those version numbers. > Mike sed: "You should remove all packages that you've installed from > either." You can purge and re-install packages. But that may not be the same as a clean installation. It is much easier to simply create a clean chroot and install there. > So how can I know now which debian packages are installed from these > deb-multimedia repositories abowe? You can use apt-show-versions. # apt-get install apt-show-versions Then use it to display what is installed from where. $ apt-show-versions | grep -v uptodate Looking at the output will show what is what. In particular you will probably have many lines marked "newer than version in archive" and other such interesting things. But reverting the system by downgrading many packages can be tedious. Bob
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