On Thu, 2003-11-13 at 17:26, Kenward Vaughan wrote: > I believe most of your concern is unjustified, as packages tend to get > reorganized over time or replaced by appropriate alternatives (renamed, > etc.). There may be some which no longer exist, but I don't {know > if | believe} they would be excised for that reason. You might check the > contents of some of the packages being removed against the unstable > distribution to see whether they exist in an alternate .deb (which you > should then find is in the new list to be downloaded). This can be > done at Debian's web site. > > One thought is whether you know of other packages dependent on those > listed. If so, what are their new (Sid) dependencies, and are those > met in your upgrade?
Kenward is right in saying that generally speaking most of the deletions, etc, are probably done for a good reason. It's definitely worth taking the time to check which packages are being removed. It's possible that their functionality is just being integrated into a pre-existing package. But to answer your original question, if you don't want any additions/deletions done, what you want is: apt-get upgrade This will only upgrade those packages that can be upgraded without requiring removing or adding packages. -- Alex Malinovich Support Free Software, delete your Windows partition TODAY! Encrypted mail preferred. You can get my public key from any of the pgp.net keyservers. Key ID: A6D24837
signature.asc
Description: This is a digitally signed message part