Josh Triplett <[email protected]> writes: > The whole point of my metapackages is that absolutely everything > *except* those metapackages is marked as "automatically installed". > There's no programmatic way to distinguish between "Recommends that > should be installed" and "Recommends that should not be installed"; that > would be per-machine state information, which is exactly what I'm trying > to avoid.
What is "recommends that should not be installed"? It sounds a bit contradicting to me. Why don't you use "Suggests" for that? > So I turn off Recommends and make sure Depends reflect the packages I > want installed. I think this is abusing the dependencies. The Policy has the hint that Recommends: is for everything that is usually installed except in special situations. Why would one turn them off by default??? (... except for special situations) > I suppose in theory I could turn Recommends back on and then add > Conflicts in my metapackages for the Recommends that shouldn't be > installed, but a quick check on my current system shows hundreds of > uninstalled packages on my system that are Recommends of installed > packages. That's more packages than I currently have in the Depends of > my metapackages; maintaining that doesn't seem practical. At least, I don't get this. Can you make an example here? Best regards Ole -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [email protected] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [email protected] Archive: https://lists.debian.org/[email protected]

