Is this question now asked once a week? What is also annoying is that
people do no own research before posting to mailing lists. If you had
googled it you would have recognized a few threads _from this list_
discussing this in the not to distant past.
http://www.gentoo.org/proj/en/portage/doc/faq.
How do I get the reverse dependencies of an ebuild?
I need to know which packages *explicity* depend on gentoo-headers as
I have custom headers which conflict with 2.6.27 mainline.
--
Andrey Vul
A: Because it messes up the order in which people normally read text.
Q: Why is top-posting such a ba
Richard Fish a écrit :
On 9/29/06, kiorky <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
hello i want to know a good tool for reverse dependencies stuff.
for example, gnutls broke my system yesterday but revdep or equery dont
took me all impacted packages. But a ldd on the impacted program show me
my soname (libg
On 9/29/06, kiorky <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
hello i want to know a good tool for reverse dependencies stuff.
for example, gnutls broke my system yesterday but revdep or equery dont
took me all impacted packages. But a ldd on the impacted program show me
my soname (libgnutls.so.*)
so i want to
kiorky a gentiment tapote:
> hello i want to know a good tool for reverse dependencies stuff.
> for example, gnutls broke my system yesterday but revdep or equery
> dont took me all impacted packages. But a ldd on the impacted program
> show me my soname (libgnutls.so.*)
> so i want to know all pa
hello i want to know a good tool for reverse dependencies stuff.
for example, gnutls broke my system yesterday but revdep or equery dont
took me all impacted packages. But a ldd on the impacted program show me
my soname (libgnutls.so.*)
so i want to know all packages depending on "/usr/lib/libg
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