Christophe Chisogne wrote: > If others have problems with non-US, I found a simple way > to list the non-US packages (if grep-dctrl is installed): > use grep-status, with a command like that one: > > # grep-status -F Section non-US -s Package,Version,Status > > Hope it can help others.
Two other, more general ways of finding obsolete packages are useful to know: You can start up aptitude and look for what's listed under the heading "Obsolete and locally created packages". Or install apt-show-versions and run it like this: apt-show-versions | grep 'No available version in archive' regards, -- Kevin B. McCarty <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Physics Department WWW: http://www.princeton.edu/~kmccarty/ Princeton University GPG: public key ID 4F83C751 Princeton, NJ 08544 -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]

