On Tue, Jan 06, 2004 at 05:18:08AM -0500, Michael B Allen wrote: | Hello, | | I just got a "linode" UML VPS over at linode.com and booted debian 3.0r1 | 2.2.24 on it. I've been using RH 7.3 and it's been a very solid distro | for me but I feel like I'm being left behind at this point. Whenever I | update a package I have to get the source from their latest packages | and rebuild.
Back when I used RedHat I always found it to be a pain the way you have to manually track down, and rebuild, package depedencies. | So I thought I'd try debian as it seems a little more consistent. | Is this true? Debian includes all of its packages in one place, and automatically builds all of them. Using apt (aptitude is a good visual front-end) you won't have to track down dependencies of a given package when you install or upgrade. | Is 3.0r1 glibc 2.3. | How is support for UTF-8 locales? | Etc. | What surprises can a RH user expect? All config files are located in /etc. You won't find any in /usr, /usr/local, or /var. Documentation for a given package FOO is in /usr/share/doc/FOO. init scripts are all found in /etc/init.d the runlevel start and kill symlinks are all found in /etc/rcN.d. Runlevels 0, 1, and 6 are identical to RH's (halt, single-user and reboot; though I don't remember which is 0 and which is 6). However, by default debian has levels 2, 3, 4, and 5 identical. If you want them to be different, it is up to you to make them have whatever meaning you want. (for example, my workstation only uses runlevel 2 but the laptop at work uses 2 for "normal" (powered) mode and 3 for "battery" mode (no daemons, no automatic running of X)) These are the main differences you'll run into that stick out in my head. I'm sure there are others that I don't remember at the moment. | Off to read about dpkg .... Not a bad start. Note that dpkg is the counterpart to rpm. However, on a debian system you won't be using dpkg most of the time. Instead you will use apt (Advanced Package Tracking ?) via a frontend such as aptitude. dpkg doesn't handle downloading or dependency resolution. Instead, apt handles that and then instructs dpkg to install (or remove) packages according to what you have told it. HTH, -D -- \begin{humor} Disclaimer: If I receive a message from you, you are agreeing that: 1. I am by definition, "the intended recipient" 2. All information in the email is mine to do with as I see fit and make such financial profit, political mileage, or good joke as it lends itself to. In particular, I may quote it on USENET or the WWW. 3. I may take the contents as representing the views of your company. 4. This overrides any disclaimer or statement of confidentiality that may be included on your message \end{humor} www: http://dman13.dyndns.org/~dman/ jabber: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
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