Re: [gentoo-user] glsa-check - is it any good?

2005-03-04 Thread W.Kenworthy
The usual problem is that the version it is complaining about is really installed. Because of slots and other peculiarities, there can be multiple versions installed that may not show on some utilties when you check. Use equery l packagename, and qpkg -v packagename to check. Note that on older,

Re: [gentoo-user] glsa-check - is it any good?

2005-03-04 Thread A. Khattri
On Fri, 4 Mar 2005, W.Kenworthy wrote: The usual problem is that the version it is complaining about is really installed. Because of slots and other peculiarities, there can be multiple versions installed that may not show on some utilties when you check. Use equery l packagename, and qpkg

[gentoo-user] glsa-check - is it any good?

2005-03-03 Thread Nick Rout
I keep my systems reasonably up to date and kind of assume that regular syncing and updating will keep it safe. However today I started looking at glsa-check, just to suss it out. However either I am doing something wrong, or it is stupid. For example GLSA 200502-09 relates to python. It says