Thank you James. A quick search in the bugs DB bring this:
https://bugs.gentoo.org/show_bug.cgi?id=574150
Please see my comments.
> Have you check bgo ? (bugs.gentoo.org)
> Try another (stable) version ?
>
> use the -t option and see what it says.
What do you "-t option". With which executable ?
>
> look in the ebuild and see what all packages are required. I does not
> hurt to manually ( -1) rebuild the dependencies (both compile time and
> runtime) in case the other codes or packaging process did not catch
> something.
If I understand you correctley, you are suggesting to rebuilt all the
dependencies for this package. This is what I am getting. There's no
depedencies:
=
localhost mansour # emerge dev-python/cryptography --with-bdeps=y
These are the packages that would be merged, in order:
Calculating dependencies... done!
[ebuild N ] dev-python/cryptography-1.1.2::gentoo
USE="(-libressl) {-test}" PYTHON_TARGETS="python2_7 python3_3 (-pypy)
-python3_4 (-python3_5)" 0 KiB
Total: 1 package (1 new), Size of downloads: 0 KiB
Would you like to merge these packages? [Yes/No]
=
Can you please kindly elaborate ?
In fact I tried rebuilding the package few times, with the same error.
>
>
>
> The q applet tools are quite extensive and many offer some looks
> into why a particular version of dev-python/cryptography is
> failing. I've only recently started noodling around with 'qcheck'
> but I cannot guarrantee that the qcheck applet will ferrit out
> your problem. If you take the time to look at the code for qcheck
> and it does not do what you want, drop me a line and I'll hack at
> it to extend the portfolio of tests it does perform; but that'll
> take a while
I am looking for a quick fix. Not sure if this is a good option now,
as I use this machine extensively , and would like to get it up to
date again !
But thank you anyway :)
By the way, I just did a sync,
and updating world. I can see a pending update for
dev-libs/openssl-1.0.2g-r2::gentoo. This will be strange as the
"equery" command shows there is no dependency. But let's see.
>
>
> Also run repoman against the version of the package you are trying
> to install and see what it tells you.
>
>
> -good hunting
> James
>
>