Scott Howard <showard...@gmail.com> writes: > Hello, > > I have a non-free package that is distributable but comes precompiled > for i386. Squeeze (and previous) released an amd64 package that > depended on ia32-libs. For wheezy we've been able to use multiarched > libraries to drop the dependency. Is there a mechanism that will make > the upgrade to wheezy work for the package? Right now dpkg uninstalls > the package (because it sees the data package, which is "all" but
Side note: Is the data package of any use other than for your binary? Why have it arch:all if it is only usefull for the :i386 binary. > can't find the corresponding binary package in amd64), users are > confused, find a bug report on the BTS or the changelog on a debian > site telling them to enable i386 in dpkg, then they install the :i386 > package and it works. > > This may just be a non-free issue people have to deal with, I just > wanted to see if there was a better way or plan in place to handle > this. > > Regards, > Scott I'm afraid there isn't a good solution. Users will need to enable multiarch to upgrade those packages. And that needs apt/dpkg upgraded first. What I will do for ia32-libs is to use 2 packages something like this: Package: ia32-libs Depends: ia32-libs-i386 Architecture: amd64 Description: ia32-libs transitional package This package transitions the runtime libraries for the ia32/i386 architecture, configured for use on an amd64 running a 64-bit kernel to use the new multiarch feature. It can be safely removed once nothing depends on it anymore. . To install/upgrade you need to enable multiarch first by running: + dpkg --add-architecture i386 + apt-get update Package: ia32-libs-i386 Architecture: i386 Depends: libfoo, libbar, libbaz Description: ia32-libs transitional package This package transitions the runtime libraries for the ia32/i386 architecture, configured for use on an amd64 running a 64-bit kernel to use the new multiarch feature. It can be safely removed once nothing depends on it anymore. . For use on amd64 systems with multiarch only. By having 2 packages, one for amd64 and one for i386, I can have a cross-architecture dependency. Using Depends: foo:i386 is not allowed in wheezy and this is the next best thing. I'm not sure wether such a dummy/transitional package would help in your case. Prior to enabling multiarch the package will be uninstallable so might be removed on upgrades the same as you have now. But that's the best solution I've seen so far. MfG Goswin -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-devel-requ...@lists.debian.org with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org Archive: http://lists.debian.org/87hauqcfej.fsf@frosties.localnet