On 18.06.15 16:30, [email protected] wrote:
> Aptitude wants to remove a large number of packages like blender,
> gimp, exiv2, the list going on and on. dselect how ever is much more
> on the ball, it only wanting to remove imagemagik and graphicsmagik.
> Apt does not appear to know what its doing, for instance it wishs to
> remove blender for 2 unmet dependencies. Curiously dselect, dpkg AND
> looking in the /var/lib/dpkg/info directory shows these dependcies
> ARE on the system.

If apt only wants to remove a few packages, what happens when you do
that and then use apt to reinstall them? It won't take long, and could
obviate the need for a complete system reinstall. Nothing lost, plenty
to gain, maybe.

I have to admit that my recent debian 7.8.0 install is piling up
notifications of recommended package upgrades, which I ignore because it
doesn't provide a list of them I can aim apt at. I'm only willing to use
one package upgrade method, and that's not blindly clicking "OK" on a
nameless GUI surrender icon.

> It's distinctly possible apt is not getting on well with a system
> thats been instaled from DVD's. I have suffered from similar package
> system  corruption from this cause in the past.

But even a net install is an install from DVD, here at least, since I've
always burnt the downloaded iso to DVD. I must admit that I've _never_
ventured a dist_upgrade. That does seem to be asking for trouble. I just
update what's really needed, piecemeal, for minimum disturbance, then
install from scratch every five years or so, whether it's needed or not.

More often would be masochistic, I think, having just discovered that
the new debian 7.8.0 install a couple of months ago lost awareness of
the HP Laserjet 3050 printer, which had worked fine for years. Each new
upgrade seems to confirm that they're a bad idea.

Erik

-- 
A Ponzi Scheme is any investment where returns are derived, not from earnings of
the investment itself, but from capital injected by new investors. When you look
at the yield on rental property in Sydney it is around 3.5%. Price growth has
been around 10.2% over the last 20 years. Smells like a Ponzi scheme to me.
- Richard, 
http://www.abc.net.au/news/2015-06-15/verrender--a-ponzi-scheme-that-could-ruin-us/6545316
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