Max Bowsher <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > Package: apt > Version: 0.6.43.3 > Severity: normal > > Usually, an epoch value is either absent, and so zero implicitly, or > explicitly present and greater than zero. > If a package version number includes an explicit epoch value of zero, > apt-get misbehaves, considering the version present in the available > download sources to be newer than the installed version, *despite* them > being the exact same version! > > This causes the affected package to be reinstalled every time an > 'apt-get upgrade' or 'apt-get dist-upgrade' is performed. > > Whilst there isn't any particularly reason for a package to include a > zero epoch value explicitly, apt should handle such a situation > gracefully.
There is if the upstream version contains a ':' temporarily and one doesn't want to have to use an epoch of 1 for all times. > This bug was discovered because mailman 0:2.1.7-2.1.8rc1-1 included an > explicit zero epoch. > > Max. MfG Goswin -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]