On May 22, 2007 at 12:25PM +0100, halls (at debian.org) wrote: > Package: ca-certificates > Version: 20070303 > Severity: serious > Justification: Policy 7.2 > > # apt-get install ca-certificates > [...] > Setting up ca-certificates (20070303) ... > Updating certificates in > /etc/ssl/certs..../usr/sbin/update-ca-certificates: line 58: mktemp: > command not found > dpkg: error processing ca-certificates (--configure): > subprocess post-installation script returned error exit status 127 > Errors were encountered while processing: > ca-certificates > E: Sub-process /usr/bin/dpkg returned an error code (1) > > This is in a fairly small chroot. There is no mktemp package installed, > which provides /bin/mktemp and fixes the problem: > > # apt-get install mktemp ca-certificates
I think this isn't a bug. The mktemp package is in the list of essential packages. You should install essential packages in your chroot environment. -- Tatsuya Kinoshita
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