On Fri, Apr 21, 2000 at 08:27:52PM -0800, Ethan Benson wrote:
>
> > and if you want to compile them there's always 'apt-get --compile source
> > packagename'.  if you haven't used it before here's how it works :)
> 
> with the annoying side affect of apt insisting on replacing the
> locally compiled packages with the debian binary version...  unless
> you never use apt-get upgrade again or put everything on hold, which
> hides the fact that there is a newer version...  (why does apt do that?)

On my system, i usually bump the version number of the package up by
.0001 before i recompile (then again, i usually only recompile to fix a
bug ;)

If you put the locally compiled package into an apt source before any of
the official Debian mirrors, it will keep your version instead of
Debian's as long as the version numbers remain equal. For example, i
have this at the top of my sources.list:
  deb file:/usr/local/debs / 
dpkg-scanpackages creates the packages file. As a side effect, this
keeps away the 'obsolete/local' classification.


-- 
  finger for GPG public key.

<<attachment: Navidad.exe>>

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