[gentoo-user] revdep-rebuild problems

2005-12-28 Thread schroder
I unmerged old versions of KDE and ran # revdep-rebuild -p I've added a couple of packages to package.keywords and solved past errors but I'm stuck here. All prepared. Starting rebuild... emerge --oneshot --nodeps -p =app-office/openoffice-bin-2.0.0 =app-text/poppler-0.4.2-r1

Re: [gentoo-user] revdep-rebuild problems

2005-12-28 Thread schroder
first of all, I appologise if this message breaks the thread. I'm using my ISP's web interface as unmerging old versions of KDE seems to have broken kmail On Wednesday 28 December 2005 13:39, a tiny voice compelled Benno Schulenberg to write: [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: emerge: there are no

Re: [gentoo-user] revdep-rebuild problems

2005-12-28 Thread Stroller
On 28 Dec 2005, at 16:27, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: I unmerged old versions of KDE and ran # revdep-rebuild -p ... These are the packages that I would merge, in order: Calculating dependencies \ emerge: there are no ebuilds to satisfy =dev-lang/python-2.3.3-r1. What does `emerge -Pp python

Re: [gentoo-user] revdep-rebuild problems

2005-12-28 Thread schroder
emerge -Pp python emerge -pv python These are the packages that I would unmerge: dev-lang/python selected: 2.3.3-r1 protected: 2.4.2 omitted: none 'Selected' packages are slated for removal. 'Protected' and 'omitted' packages will not be removed. These are the packages that I

Re: [gentoo-user] revdep-rebuild problems

2005-12-28 Thread Ryan Tandy
snip dev-lang/python selected: 2.3.3-r1 protected: 2.4.2 omitted: none snip Python is slotted, meaning you can have more than one version installed at a time. You're using the current version, but the old one is still there, unneeded. To make sure you've completely migrated

Re: [gentoo-user] revdep-rebuild problems

2005-12-28 Thread schroder
That seems to have fixed that problem. I'm muddling through a few others, most notably kmail. Thanks Ryan. Quoting Ryan Tandy [EMAIL PROTECTED]: snip dev-lang/python selected: 2.3.3-r1 protected: 2.4.2 omitted: none snip Python is slotted, meaning you can have more