On Sun, Mar 09, 2003 at 02:11:51AM -0800, Craig Dickson wrote......
> Michael D. Schleif wrote: > > > What am I missing? > > > > # apt-cache policy libc6 > > libc6: > > Installed: 2.2.5-14.3 > > Candidate: 2.2.5-14.3 > > Version Table: > > Have you done an "apt-get update" today? Even if you have, try it again, > then try "apt-cache policy libc6" again and see if it's any different. I > don't know what else could have us showing different information about > the same repository. O.k., so it seems as if libc6 has moved to testing and that packages.d.o is just a bit behind. No problem. But I guess I'm still a bit surprised that this upgrade forced me to uninstall php4 (at least the forced uninstall is better than simply breaking it). Anyway, I need to run php. Am I correct in assuming that if I want to run php4, I'll have to apt-get -t unstable install php4 and that if I do this, that it will seek out all of the upgrade dependencies it needs from unstable. For example, if I check the dependencies of php4 unstable, I see that it requires apache-common >1.3.27, yet my current testing version is 1.3.26-1.1. So will this automatically get updated to unstable too? And perhaps further dependencies down the line as well, in essence making this box a sid box? Sorry for the detailed and probably somewhat obvious question, but I switched over to Debian last summer, and am loving it. But this is the first time I've encountered this type of situation where a testing package upgrade (libc6) caused an incompatitibility with another testing package, in the case php4. Perhaps that's why they call it testing? Thanks Kevin -- Kevin Coyner mailto: [EMAIL PROTECTED] GnuPG key: 1024D/8CE11941
pgp00000.pgp
Description: PGP signature