Man, you have just screwed your system, I guess.
This is exactly how the dependiences work ;) You cannot use things
without jackd - this is why it wants to remove any problematic pieces
prior to any installation :D
First - don't hurry. When you will ruin your system, you will probably
loose more time. Read manuals before typing anything into console.
Secondly, if avaliable, try to download the package by hand and install
it via some primitive tool like gdebi or even dpkg - this is handy kind
of swiss army knife for packages.
Reinstalling whole this mess also should be easy - as long, as there are
aptitude and networking tools still installed, don't be affraid of
reinstalling things. You should have packages cashed somewhere anyway,
so download should not take too long.
After you rescue or reinstall your things - don't mess with different
package tools, keep your things clean and do not experiment - cause this
is really tricky to experiment in depency-based package managed systems.
Use one tool only - aptitude is great, or triple- or quadruple-check if
the policies in the tools you intend to use match exactly.
Any Ubuntu-based system REALLY is immune to any fine-tuning without PhD
in ubuntology. Use Slack or Arch if you want to play with the system in
the Linux way. I was able to delete my whole /usr (the place where the
software goes) and have system up and running in repairable state.
You could always keep the newer version of your favourite soft somewhere
without installing it by package, and just run it from where it is.
I really hate Ubuntu family, it smells like unusable blasphemy for me
since forever, and, being moderately experienced Linux user, I found
Ubuntu finally always breaks itself. ;)
So have fun, esp. if you are learning the hard way. This is only the
time and the software - you have both i hope, there is no need to loose
health too.
Cheers,
Luke
W dniu 2010-05-20 16:07, gusano pisze:
ok, I removed jackd via 'apt-remove'.
now if I want to *reinstall* it, aptitude wants to *remove* the
following packages:
amsynth, audacious, audacity, avidemux, avidemux-plugins, chuck,
csladspa, csound, darkice, dssi-host-jack, ecasound, fluxus, ...,
libjack-dev, libjack0, libjack0.100.0-0, libportaudio2, all pd libs,
puredata, ..., vlc-plugin-jack, wsynth-dssi, zynaddsubfx.
WTF ?
_y
On 20/05/10 15:49, gusano wrote:
hi Ricardo
thanks for the suggestion but I'm afraid it's a bit too tricky for me
right now..
what I don't get is: why nearly all audio apps installed in pure:dyne
are dependencies from jackd ? (just an example)
I would love being able to 'apt-get remove jackd' and aptitude would
remove *only* technical dependencies (and not Ardour or SuperCollider
packages...)
cheers,
_y
On 20/05/10 15:14, Ricardo G. Herdt wrote:
In debian, I'd fetch the sources from unstable (having the proper
deb-src line in /etc/sources.list) with ' apt-get source jackd ' and
create a deb package from them using ' dpkg-buildpackage -rfakeroot -b
-us -uc '. Then I'd simply replace the installed jackd with it,
without uninstalling anything. You could try the same with sources
from newer versions from ubuntu. Just a suggestion.
2010/5/20, gusano<[email protected]>:
hello
while trying to fix my FW sound issues (again...), I'd like to
uninstall
jackd and libffado to compile newer versions.
problem is, if I do that aptitude wants to remove (nearly) all packages
from my system !
is there a way to remove *only one* package ?
cheers,
_y
---
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---
[email protected]
http://identi.ca/group/puredyne
irc://irc.goto10.org/puredyne
---
[email protected]
http://identi.ca/group/puredyne
irc://irc.goto10.org/puredyne
---
[email protected]
http://identi.ca/group/puredyne
irc://irc.goto10.org/puredyne