On Tue, Feb 27, 2001 at 10:28:28PM +0100, Michael Schmitz wrote:
I tried searching packages at http://www.debian.org/distrib/packages. I
entered pmud and chose options of distriubution=any and section=any.
There was nothing found. I think the search engine is broken.
That's hardly
Sven LUTHER wrote:
On Tue, Feb 27, 2001 at 10:28:28PM +0100, Michael Schmitz wrote:
I tried searching packages at http://www.debian.org/distrib/packages. I
entered pmud and chose options of distriubution=any and section=any.
There was nothing found. I think the search engine is
On Wed, 28 Feb 2001, Michel Dänzer wrote:
Just use madison package on ftp-master.
What's this madison thingy? I keep reading about it, but I can't find it in the
Debian package search engine, not even in unstable.
Gr{oetje,eeting}s,
Geert
--
What's this madison thingy? I keep reading about it, but I can't find it in
the
Debian package search engine, not even in unstable.
Similar to sbuild, wanna-build and friends: useful but undocumented tools
:-)
Now that I know it's there I'll go try it out.
Michael
On Wed, Feb 28, 2001 at 09:26:27AM +0100, Geert Uytterhoeven wrote:
On Wed, 28 Feb 2001, Michel Dänzer wrote:
Just use madison package on ftp-master.
What's this madison thingy? I keep reading about it, but I can't find it in
the
Debian package search engine, not even in unstable.
Sven LUTHER wrote:
On Wed, Feb 28, 2001 at 09:26:27AM +0100, Geert Uytterhoeven wrote:
On Wed, 28 Feb 2001, Michel Dänzer wrote:
Just use madison package on ftp-master.
What's this madison thingy? I keep reading about it, but I can't find it
in the Debian package search engine, not
On Tue, Feb 27, 2001 at 09:53:04AM +1100, Brendan J Simon wrote:
I found it in testing and unstable only by updating my
/etc/apt/sources.list file and doing an apt-get update. I didn't really
want to do that but now I have taken the plunge.
I tried searching packages at
On Tue, Feb 27, 2001 at 12:22:25PM +0100, Sven LUTHER wrote:
I tried searching packages at http://www.debian.org/distrib/packages. I
entered pmud and chose options of distriubution=any and section=any.
There was nothing found. I think the search engine is broken.
Or more likely, it
I tried searching packages at http://www.debian.org/distrib/packages. I
entered pmud and chose options of distriubution=any and section=any.
There was nothing found. I think the search engine is broken.
That's hardly surprising. The search engine has been broken (for $Arch !=
i386) from Day
At 04:12 -0900 2/27/2001, Ethan Benson wrote:
yup that search engine is still i386 only. but the file search engine
now supports other/all archetectures. you just select the arch you
want from the menu. so you could do a file search for /sbin/pmud or
whatever and probably find the package ;-)
On Tue, Feb 27, 2001 at 06:25:46PM -0600, Kevin van Haaren wrote:
At 04:12 -0900 2/27/2001, Ethan Benson wrote:
yup that search engine is still i386 only. but the file search engine
now supports other/all archetectures. you just select the arch you
want from the menu. so you could do a file
Is pmud still a Debian package ???
I can't find it using apt-cache or searching www.debian.org.
Is there something to replace pmud for my PowerBook G3 (firewire) ???
Thanks,
Brendan Simon.
Is pmud still a Debian package ???
I haven't heard anything to the contrary. And you think I as the Debian
maintainer of pmud would have heard it first if pmud was removed from the
distribution.
BTW it should be in unstable.
Michael
BTW it should be in unstable.
[EMAIL PROTECTED]:~$ madison pmud
pmud | 0.7-3 | testing | powerpc
pmud | 0.7-3 | unstable | powerpc
It's also in testing. Never been in potato, right?
Nope. Potato was in deep freeze when I first packaged it, and I've not
I found it in testing and unstable only by updating my
/etc/apt/sources.list file and doing an apt-get update. I didn't really
want to do that but now I have taken the plunge.
I tried searching packages at http://www.debian.org/distrib/packages. I
entered pmud and chose options of
I found it in testing and unstable only by updating my
/etc/apt/sources.list file and doing an apt-get update.
I didn't really
want to do that but now I have taken the plunge.
change /etc/apt/sources.list back to stable and run apt-get
update again. You should be back to normal then.
Paul Kimber wrote:
I found it in testing and unstable only by updating my
/etc/apt/sources.list file and doing an apt-get update.
I didn't really
want to do that but now I have taken the plunge.
change /etc/apt/sources.list back to stable and run apt-get
update again. You should be back
Brendan J Simon said at ÒRe: debian-powerpc: I can't find
pmudÓ.
[27/Feb/01Tue 10:08]
Paul Kimber wrote:
I found it in testing and unstable only by updating my
/etc/apt/sources.list file and doing an apt-get
update.
I didn't really
want to do that but now I have taken the plunge.
Brendan J Simon wrote:
I found it in testing and unstable only by updating my
/etc/apt/sources.list file and doing an apt-get update. I didn't
really want to do that but now I have taken the plunge.
In apt 0.5 it is now possible to do apt-get install pmud/testing to
install another release's
In apt 0.5 it is now possible to do apt-get install pmud/testing to
install another release's version of a single package.
apt 0.5 is only in unstable at the moment, so it wouldn't have helped your
particular case, but in the future these things should be easier.
I'd read this elsewhere,
run lynx, browse to:
http://packages.debian.org/unstable/
browse to the package you want, download it. Lynx will automatically
download and install the package. This is how I added the SolidPop
server from unstable to my potato install. Read the dependencies
section on the package page and
OK, maybe not. I don't see it listed in the All Packages listing of
unstable or testing (which takes forever to download by the way).
At 19:38 -0600 2/26/2001, Kevin van Haaren wrote:
run lynx, browse to:
http://packages.debian.org/unstable/
browse to the package you want, download it.
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