Forgive my frustration with this, but why bother having a bug reporting and tracking system if the bugs reported are just to be blown off with flip remarks like "apt just installs packages. It doesn't remove files from other packages." It certainly removes files under many circumstances, including during upgrading and during removing operations. *I* certainly didn't delete /usr/bin/vim.
This bug report isn't vague, but it is very simple. I've upgraded at least five potato installations to woody, on i386, powerpc and sparc, and only this time has this happened. Vim was there and installed in potato and used daily. System was upgraded to woody. /usr/bin/vim and all other related files and links are now deleted, and no new files are installed in their place. The new, woody, version of vim was NOT installed. This is fairly serious(or maybe just seriously annoying). After the upgrade, dselect showed the old, 5.6.070 version of vim is (supposedly) installed, but of course the files aren't there. a Debian Bug Tracking System wrote: > > Thank you for the additional information you have supplied regarding > this problem report. It has been forwarded to the developer(s) and > to the developers mailing list to accompany the original report. > > Your message has been sent to the package maintainer(s): > APT Development Team <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > > If you wish to continue to submit further information on your problem, > please send it to [EMAIL PROTECTED], as before. > > Please do not reply to the address at the top of this message, > unless you wish to report a problem with the Bug-tracking system. > > Debian bug tracking system administrator > (administrator, Debian Bugs database) -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]

