Ok i see that you got apache in the middle of a transition, that is why your check still see apache-perl as a source.
a few months ago there were 3 apache flavours built from 3 different sources. apache, apache-ssl and apache-perl. Since the apache source code was present in all of them and they were often out of sync we (as apache maintainer team) decided to merge the 3 sources in one (apache) and be able to build the 3 flavours out of it. A special cases has been done for libapache-mod-perl. mod_perl is a requirement to build apache-perl so we decided to generate libapache-mod-perl together with apache{-ssl,-perl} without bloating the archive with another source package. The only reason you still find apache-perl as source in the archive is because ftp-master scripts still have to remove it. Of course this is valid for sid/sarge. woody can't be changed and it willl ship the 3 sources that you see in the pool. I think this should clarify everything. Fabio On Wed, 27 Aug 2003, Glenn McGrath wrote: > On Tue, 26 Aug 2003 20:38:12 +0200 (CEST) > Fabio Massimo Di Nitto <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > > On Wed, 27 Aug 2003, Glenn McGrath wrote: > > > > > The following is a list of packages whose names are inconsistent > > > with accepted behaviour (plz correct me if im wrong) > > > > Sorry for my ignorance but which is the accepted behaviour? i couldn't > > find anything in the policies and in devel-reference (just had a fast > > look trough them) > > Section 3.1 > Every package must have a name that's unique within the Debian archive. > The package name is included in the control field Package, .... > > It is open to interpretation a little bit i guess, but as i see it > > Every Package field in the Sources file must be unique to that file, and > every Package field in the Packages file must be unique to that file. > > As it stands the apache-perl binary package (to pick on your case) could > be generated from two different source packages, only one binary will > ever be accepted as part of the binary release, if you try and insert a > second one the old binary will be thrown out. > > Its hard for machines (autobuilders etc) to know which source the binary > really should be generated from. > > Im not sure what should be done with regard to bootstapping apache. > > > > Glenn > > > -- Our mission: make IPv6 the default IP protocol "We are on a mission from God" - Elwood Blues http://www.itojun.org/paper/itojun-nanog-200210-ipv6isp/mgp00004.html