bob posted on Mon, 02 Apr 2012 15:41:00 +0000 as excerpted: > I downloaded the gnutls and started to build it, but, it required > nettle.. > downloaded nettle to build it and found it required something else, > which I could not find. So, I gave up around 1.00 am CDT. > > I was awakened by my next door neighbor at 8:00, as he had locked > himself out of his apartment, for which he had given me a key. Got that > taken care of, so here I am again. > > Going to delete all the files in my working directory and re-populate it > and start over again, now that I have a better idea of what I am doing.
Hmm... "dependency hell" they used to call it. That's what a good package manager deals with these days, so the user doesn't have to. On gentoo I build from sources, but I've not had dependency hell since my Mandrake days, as there's usually at least a masked version of the ebuild that I can unmask somewhere, that has all the deps listed. The exception is when I'm following upstream as closely as with pan, but then I know or fast learn pan's direct deps when they change, and the deps of deps are again taken care of with gentoo ebuilds. But AFAIK, that nettle dep and the API changes around it are one of the reasons many of the distros only have the old versions at this point. That answers HM's question of why so old. Earlier versions didn't require it. On gentoo, I had to unmask the newer gnutls to use it, but once I did, it pulled in all the other deps I needed, with maybe one more unmasking, and portage telling me what it needed. -- Duncan - List replies preferred. No HTML msgs. "Every nonfree program has a lord, a master -- and if you use the program, he is your master." Richard Stallman _______________________________________________ Pan-users mailing list [email protected] https://lists.nongnu.org/mailman/listinfo/pan-users
