* Russ Allbery [Wed, 14 Dec 2005 14:55:34 -0800]: > > Oooh. Well, (a) that's very sane, since they won't be co-installable, > > which does not qualify as 'breaks' in my book;
> Well, but libapache-mod-auth-kerb depends on libkrb53, so basically while > everyone's existing installation will work at the cost of apt-get holding > back libkrb53, no one would be able to install the package. So it's not > as bad as it could be, but it is kind of annoying. Yep; normal behavior in unstable, NotNice™ in testing, I'll agree. > > and (b) britney will block krb53 from entering testing until l-m-a-k > > is ready to go, since otherwise the uninstallability count in testing > > would increase. So far so good. :) > Huh, really? I didn't think it worked that way -- extra priority packages > are allowed to conflict with other packages, for instance, and they > migrate into testing. Yeah, they conflict with other packages, but not with packages that depend on them. britney cares about installability of a package, not about general co-installability, so it only looks at the conflicts on rdepending packages (as I, heh, painfully learnt learned with [1]). [1] http://lists.debian.org/debian-devel-changes/2004/12/msg01132.html > If that's the case, then libapache-mod-auth-kerb is going to hold up KDE > as well until we push the whole thing. (The new version is uploaded now.) Haha. Where do I have to sign to get a kdelibs4c2a transition that will be held by l-m-a-k, which will at most take 10 days? Cheers, -- Adeodato Simó dato at net.com.org.es Debian Developer adeodato at debian.org And don't get me wrong - I don't mind getting proven wrong. I change my opinions the way some people change underwear. And I think that's ok. -- Linus Torvalds -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]