On 01/29/2017 03:25 PM, Frank Steinmetzger wrote:
> On Sun, Jan 29, 2017 at 03:32:22PM -0600, Dale wrote:
> 
>>>> I haven't updated my system for over a year (1year and 3-months).
>>>> I was trying to upgrade my firefox-bin and I'm already running into 
>>>> problems.
>>>>
>>>> What is my best option, re-install from scratch, upgrade in stages etc.
>>>> With firefox-bin I'm getting:
>>>
>>> 1 year 3 months isn't usually that bad and it can be done - I've done it
>>> many times myself. However there are gotchas:
>>> […]
>>> - go slowly and deal with one block at a time. A regular emerge world
>>> probably won't succeed so you gotta bite of small chunks
>>>
>>> With those basics out the way, it's a great learning experience. I
>>> recommend you do it at least once.
>>
>> Might I also add, the -t option can reveal what is causing what
>> sometimes.
> 
> Add --unordered-display to that (I put it into my emerge default options).
> It will shrink the output by removing duplicate [nomerge] lines and give you
> an easier to understand overview.
> 
> A short while ago I updated an old netbook that hadn't seen any action in
> probably 2 years. It took a while (I cloned the HDD and compiled on my main
> rig), but I prevailed, inlcuding KDE 4 upgrades.
> 
>> Also, I'd start with @system first, then work on @world.
> 
> I use custom sets (basic tools, system utilities, X stuff, media players
> etc) and dealt with one of them at a time, starting with the less intricate
> ones.
> 
>> Only bad thing is, KDE, if you have it installed, is in @system because
>> of dependencies, last I checked anyway.
> 
> Uhm, KDE will not become part of @system, but you probably can't update kde
> without @system first. Much fun comes from the package renaming from
> kde-base to kde-apps, and now KDE4 isn't even in the tree anymore. (The OP
> hasn't stated whether he actually uses KDE, though.)
> 
> There are three options that spring to mind:
> - use the -D flag. Not really an option at the start, but later on in the
>   process. The problem: if you upgrade package A, which depends on package
>   C, then the -D flag will catch it. But if package B also depends on it and
>   *requires* a lower version, you get blockers.
>   - Those blockers you can either remove temporarily (such as media
>     applications that are rich in dependencies)
>   - or add them to a small list of packages that you then update with one
>     emerge run.
> - Try updating the unsuspicious stuff first. It will thin out your emerge
>   output and let you deal with the tricky stuff later. Ask eix -uc. It will
>   show you all upgradable packages and mark those in world with a different
>   colour. Plus it is my hope that this will speed up emerge -u world because
>   the package list becomes smaller.
> 
> Happy hunting.

I'm running Xfce so I don't have to deal with KDE?.
Thanks all for help, I'll stay in touch if I run into problem.  And I'm
sure there will be plenty :-)


Thelma

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