Sebastian wrote:
On Thu, Jan 28, 2010 at 09:27PM -0500, Wayne <linux...@gmail.com> wrote:
Sebastian wrote:
After the last upgrade wicd fails to start. It also stopped writing it's logs
and when I call it directly by just entering 'wicd' I get following error:
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "/usr/share/wicd/daemon/wicd-daemon.py", line 61, in <module>
from wicd.logfile import ManagedStdio
ImportError: No module named logfile
I tried purging and re-installing it but to no avail...
Should I file this as a bug or is it just me not seeing something obvious?
Can't really say as you forgot to tell us what you are running on and
which version of wicd isn't working.
Ah yeah, sorry...
I'm running squeeze/sid (apt prefers testing) mainly testing yet I am
a bit confused as I can only seem to find version 1.7.0-2 of wicd on
my system but packages.debian.org states that the current testing
version is 1.6.2.2-4 and testing is 1.7.0-2 (my version). I tried
removing it and re-installing with 'apt-get install wicd=1.6.2.2-4'
with the reply: E: Version '1.6.2.2-4' for 'wicd' was not found?!?
I also run testing/sid and my wicd is from testing.
You might(?) want to try 'aptitude -t testing install wicd' after you
remove your current wicd sid package (not purge). That will bull in a
Just did an update and 'apt-cache show wicd'. Note: I have squeeze and
unstable in my sources.list. Your 1.7.0-2 version does not use the
python packages that 1.6.2.2-4 does.
Strange, I see that there is a python-wicd 1.7.0-2 package in unstable
but it is not shown as Depends in wicd 1.7.0-2 package. Wonder what that
is about???
Even if I remove the unstable and stable entries from sources.list and
apt/preferences no other versions show up
I would not put all 3 dists in sources.list. That could/would cause
quite some mess. testing/unstable is bad enough but you should be
careful using it. If I even 'think' about pulling in an unstable
package, and it's dependices, I first run apt-listbugs on all of those
packages before I download any of them
Is there a good way of checking from which repository an installed
package is, by the way?
Yes 'apt-cache policy wicd' will show the packages in every dist you
have in the sources.list, I believe. Here it shows both testing/unstable.
Hope this helps
Wayne
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