On 30/10/2015 8:58 a.m., TarotApprentice wrote:
Depending on if you're running Debian Stretch (the current testing
version) you'd do an "apt-get install squid" or if you're on an older
Debian I believe you can do an "apt-get -t testing install squid"
although I haven't tried the second method mys
On 29/10/2015 22:30, Amos Jeffries wrote:
I would not recommend the backporting. There are GCC-5 toolchain changes
that are quite huge in Testing. We also added a squid3/squid package
name transition in Squid itself.
So the things that a backport like that will pull as dependencies may
blow up i
PS. replying to me directly does not help the list members asking. ;-)
On 30/10/2015 8:58 a.m., TarotApprentice wrote:
> Depending on if you're running Debian Stretch (the current testing version)
> you'd do an "apt-get install squid" or if you're on an older Debian I believe
> you can do an "ap
Instructions on what to add into the sources.list.
I know I have used one of these in the past on some machine but I am
unable to find how to.
I have tried to look at the wiki as the first step and I have found it
mentioned with the url for the bugzilla but not one word on what to add
into the
On 30/10/2015 4:47 a.m., Eliezer Croitoru wrote:
> Hey,
>
> I was wondering about the details on how to install these unstable
> packages.
> It was not mentioned in the squid wiki and I would be happy to add the
> details into it.
Ah, they are the names of the Debian repositories "Unstable" or "S
Hey,
I was wondering about the details on how to install these unstable packages.
It was not mentioned in the squid wiki and I would be happy to add the
details into it.
Thanks,
Eliezer
On 12/10/2015 15:36, TarotApprentice wrote:
Thanks to Luigi at Debian they have Squid 3.5.10-1 in Debian