At 11:51 PM 5/3/2002 -0700, Thomas Bushnell, BSG wrote:
>Joey Hess <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>
> > You can switch to a different VT and kill base-config once it goes into
> > its loop, install the one from unstable, and run base-config by hand. Or
> > better, boot up to single user mode in the first reboot, upgrade
> > base-config to unstable's at that point, and let it boot on up to
> > multiuser for a clean test of unstable's base-config.
>
>It's not that easy.  If you kill base-config, then init will just
>start another one.
>
>You have to edit it out of /etc/inittab, kill it off, and then do what
>Joey says.

I remain confused.  I experienced the looping bug.  I edited 
/etc/apt/sources.list to point to unstable and did an apt-get update and 
upgrade of base-config.  I then changed my sources.list to point back to 
testing.

I ran base-config - no loop! - but now it's getting from "stable" instead 
of from testing.

I don't mind running a partial potato, since I'm installing this on my 
son's new system, but I was kind of hoping to get from stuff woody 
instead.  Is this a feature of base-config, or did I lamely overlook a 
switch or config file that would have forced it to get from stable?  My 
sources.list just had a single line at this point:
         deb http://http.us.debian.org/debian testing main

but now, lo and behold, it has a bunch of lines in addition to/following 
that one, all pointing to various "stable" sites.

-Del


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