Control: severity -1 minor Control: tags -1 +wontfix Well, yes, that’s intentional. See the changelog for 76 version for the background. If you think of any better solution that would not mix extensions from different PHP versions and break all the autopkgtests, I am listening.
Besides there has been always only one supported PHP version per Debian release. Ondřej -- Ondřej Surý <ond...@sury.org> > On 14 May 2020, at 22:42, Thorsten Glaser <t...@mirbsd.de> wrote: > > Package: php-common > Version: 2:76 > Severity: important > > The installation of the new version wants to remove the copies of > PHP 7.0, 7.1, 7.2 and 7.3 I’ve installed to be able to reproduce > problems and ensure support for those older versions from my system. > > -- System Information: > Debian Release: bullseye/sid > APT prefers unreleased > APT policy: (500, 'unreleased'), (500, 'buildd-unstable'), (500, > 'unstable'), (100, 'experimental') > Architecture: x32 (x86_64) > Foreign Architectures: i386, amd64 > > Kernel: Linux 5.5.0-2-amd64 (SMP w/4 CPU cores) > Kernel taint flags: TAINT_FIRMWARE_WORKAROUND > Locale: LANG=C, LC_CTYPE=en_US.UTF-8 (charmap=UTF-8), LANGUAGE=C > (charmap=UTF-8) > Shell: /bin/sh linked to /bin/lksh > Init: sysvinit (via /sbin/init) > > Versions of packages php-common depends on: > ii psmisc 23.3-1 > ii sed 4.7-1 > > php-common recommends no packages. > > php-common suggests no packages. > > -- no debconf information