On Wed, Jan 07, 2004 at 12:42:58PM -0500, Michael D. Crawford wrote:
I just updated today, and now whenever I try to install any software, dselect keeps wanting me to resolve dependencies. Eventually I get down to where it lists two packages, mozilla-browser and mozilla-xmlterm. After that, no matter what I do, I can't get dselect to think the dependencies are satisfied. The only escape is to control-c to kill dselect, so I can't really use dselect anymore.
[...]
Pressing return to exit the dialog just brings me back into the dialog.
It's not the only escape to just kill dselect.
An excerpt from 'man dselect': By pressing enter, the currently displayed set of selections is accepted. If dselect detects no unresolved depends as a result of the requested selections, the new selections will be set. However, if there are any unresolveded depends, dselect will again prompt the user with a dependency resolution screen.
To alter a set of selections that creates unresolved depends or conflicts and forcing dselect to accept it, press the 'Q' key. This sets the selections as specified by the user, unconditionally. Generally, don't do this unless you've read the fine print.
The opposite effect, to back out any selections change requests and go back to the previous list of selections, is attained by pressing the 'X' or escape keys. By repeatedly pressing these keys, any possibly detrimental changes to the requested package selections can be backed out completely to the last established settings.
Thus pressing 'X' or 'Q' are other ways of escaping this cycle.
But as Colin noted, removing mozilla-xmlterm might be the best solution here.
Cheers, Flo
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