I think the best way to go is to clone efl and e from git.enlightenment.org,
compile and install them in another prefix so that you don't break your Bodhi 
distro.

just follow the steps here 
https://www.enlightenment.org/docs/distros/debian-start


On Tuesday 28 November 2017  20:49, Peter Flynn wrote :
> On 28/11/17 00:05, Carsten Haitzler wrote:
> > On Mon, 27 Nov 2017 20:38:30 +0000 Peter Flynn <pe...@silmaril.ie> said:
> [snip]
> > > Does anyone have suggestions. I can't find a page describing how to
> > > replace Moksha with E22.
> > 
> > looks like it needs a newer efl install. apt-get -f install ? or remove efl,
> > enlightenment and anything that depends on these from bodhi and maybe 
> > compile
> > your own?
> 
> Should I do all this from a Ctl-Alt-F1 console, rather than from the X
> session (which would be Moksha) where you presumably can't remove a package
> while it's in use (or can you?).
> 
> On 28/11/17 00:40, Dave wrote:
> [...]
> > I'm not too experienced with Ubuntu PPA sources, but I had a look at
> > that link, and it seems like the PPA source has that version of libefl
> > available. Not sure why it wasn't installed automatically.
> 
> I grabbed the screen log of the session so when I get back to the machine
> I'll have a look. I suspect it be a conflict: Moksha requiring one version
> of efl and the new e requiring a different one, and Bodhi refusing to run
> both.
> 
> > What happened when you ran "apt-get -f install"?
> 
> That's what the log is. I'll have a look. It all went normally until the end
> when it claimed it had unmet dependencies.
> 
> > If you want, you can always download the .deb file and install it
> > manually. Download it via the URL:
> > https://launchpad.net/~niko2040/+archive/ubuntu/e19/+files/libefl_1.20.6-0xenial0_amd64.deb
> 
> Always an option when you know where to find it :-) Thanks.
> Although on current behaviour, I wouldn't trust Bodhi to honour it, given
> that it already knows it doesn't have libefl (>= 1.20.6-0xenial0)
> and refused to install it when I typed apt-get -f install
> 
> >  I assume you know how to use "dpkg" to install deb files.
> Yes indeed, thanks.
> 
> ///Peter
> 
> ///Peter
> 
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--- Hell'O from Yverdoom

Jérémy (jeyzu)

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