> I'd appreciate knowing what problems you experienced, since Debian packages
> are supposed to be downgradeable.
I did almost the same thing on my laptop the other day, except that I
--purged a fair number of the leaf nodes in the dependency tree (all of
the xfont-* stuff, and a few other things)
On Sun, Oct 22, 2000 at 12:49:39AM -0700, Karl M. Hegbloom wrote:
> I tried to get XFree86 4.0.1 working on my laptop, but cannot. I
> decided to just downgrade for now, so I can use it. Here's how I did
> it, in case anyone else needs to do the similar.
I'd appreciate knowing what problems y
> I'd appreciate knowing what problems you experienced, since Debian packages
> are supposed to be downgradeable.
I did almost the same thing on my laptop the other day, except that I
--purged a fair number of the leaf nodes in the dependency tree (all of
the xfont-* stuff, and a few other things
On Sun, Oct 22, 2000 at 12:49:39AM -0700, Karl M. Hegbloom wrote:
> I tried to get XFree86 4.0.1 working on my laptop, but cannot. I
> decided to just downgrade for now, so I can use it. Here's how I did
> it, in case anyone else needs to do the similar.
I'd appreciate knowing what problems
I tried to get XFree86 4.0.1 working on my laptop, but cannot. I
decided to just downgrade for now, so I can use it. Here's how I did
it, in case anyone else needs to do the similar.
dpkg --list | grep '4.0.1-0' | awk '{print $2;}' | xargs --remove
--force-depends --auto-deconfigure
edit
I tried to get XFree86 4.0.1 working on my laptop, but cannot. I
decided to just downgrade for now, so I can use it. Here's how I did
it, in case anyone else needs to do the similar.
dpkg --list | grep '4.0.1-0' | awk '{print $2;}' | xargs --remove --force-depends
--auto-deconfigure
edi
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