OoO En ce début d'après-midi ensoleillé du mardi 08 mars 2011, vers 15:16, Jamie Thompson <bugs.deb...@jamie-thompson.co.uk> disait :
>> It seems that some users have an "identities" table with a "changed" >> column. I don't know how this happened. I will do a quick upload to fix >> this problem. Do you remember the different versions of roundcube that >> you installed on your system? Something like 0.1, 0.3, 0.3.1, 0.5.1 for >> example. > The entries I have in old dpkg.log(s) are: >> 2010-07-30 20:55:53 upgrade roundcube-core 0.3.1-3 0.3.1-4 >> 2010-09-17 15:55:27 upgrade roundcube-core 0.3.1-4 0.3.1-5 >> 2011-03-07 23:31:36 upgrade roundcube-core 0.3.1-6 0.5.1+dfsg-3 > ...but I subscribed to the roundcube mailing list on 2010-04-20, so > would have started on whatever the version in testing was at that time, > and I upgrade all my packages fairly frequently. Your first version should be 0.3.1. There was no changed column in this version for the identities table. Some other users did have the same problem as you. I was considering that they upgraded to some faulty version (like 0.5-1) and therefore their database was messed up. However, this is not your case. There is roundcube 0.5.1+dfsg-6 in unstable. You can grab roundcube-core package from: http://packages.debian.org/sid/roundcube-core And install it with dpkg -i. You should not have any error message even with your partial upgrade applied. Other packages like "roundcube" and "roundcube-mysql" will be broken but this is harmless (everything is in roundcube-core). You can download them and install them if you wish. -- BOFH excuse #125: we just switched to Sprint.
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