Quoting Christopher C. Chimelis ([EMAIL PROTECTED]): > To end this long reply, I suggest this: compile your own Xserver and utah > and install it in /usr/local until things work out to the point where they > are usable again for your setup.
What I did was use the potato 3.3.6 xserver, because xserver-mach64 doesn't get built anymore, and repacked utah-glx without Conflicts: xfree86-common(>=4.0) line. For some more fun, today I built xserver-mach64 from 3.3.6-18 sources, with very little problems - added it back to debian/{control,create-arch-xservers} and to debian/patches/000a* (whatever it's called). Now I have a xserver-mach64_3.3.6-18, almost like it still existed in distro. ;-) Had to do that because there is no DRI for mach64 yet, and I like those nifty gl screensavers, not to mention tuxracer. One could file a bug to utah-glx package and request replacing of Conflicts: xfree86-common(>=4.0) with a dependency on xserver-common-v3, or maybe on any of those xserver packages utah-glx works with. That would deal with the removal of utah-glx on upgrade. Zoran -- menage a trois, n.: Using both hands to masturbate.