You can also use apt-get dselect-upgrade. I think the problem was that one of the first ssh upgrades conflicted with an rsh package. apt-get dselect-upgrade removed it for me and installed the new ssh.
> > Use apt-get -u upgrade to show what packages are being upgraded, then > apt-get install them to fetch the dependencies as well, or just use > apt-get dist-upgrade, which gets additional dependencies (And removed > conflicting packages), automatically. > > On Thu, 2002-06-27 at 19:14, Howland, Curtis wrote: > > I noticed the same thing when doing the 3.3 thing two days > ago that I commented on on this list. > > > > The security server is in my apt.sources list, but when I > executed "apt-get upgrade", it said "0 new, 0 to be removed, > 1 package(s) not updated". -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]