On Fri, Nov 01, 2002 at 01:37:27PM +0200, Johann Spies wrote: > On Fri, Nov 01, 2002 at 10:19:58AM +0100, Marcel Lemmen wrote: > > I found a problem with the unstable libc6 version and Mozilla (I'll > > send another e-mail when this has been solved...). Therefor I've > > downgraded libdb1-compat and libc6 and Mozilla worked fine > > again.
Um. I bet you had to force this, right? > > Now other programs won't work anymore, I'll get the following > > message: > > Try using apt-get -f install -f isn't a cure-all. It has a very specific meaning: -f --fix-broken Fix; attempt to correct a system with broken dependen- cies in place. This option, when used with install/remove, can omit any packages to permit APT to deduce a likely soltion. Any Package that are specified must completly correct the problem. The option is some- times necessary when running APT for the first time; APT itself does not allow broken package dependencies to exist on a system. It is possible that a system's depen- dency structure can be so corrupt as to require manual intervention (which usually means using dselect(8) or dpkg --remove to eliminate some of the offending pack- ages). Use of this option together with -m may produce an error in some situations. Configuration Item: APT::Get::Fix-Broken. You'll need to get a tar binary that works with the stable libc6 instead. I've put /bin/tar from 1.13.25-2 (woody/i386) here: http://people.debian.org/~cjwatson/tar Download that, move it to /bin/tar, reinstall the tar package from woody so that everything is consistent, and continue. If you want to be careful, the md5sum of that binary is: $ md5sum /bin/tar de7b59b9f2c5a369b9adecbeeff9d44d /bin/tar ... and somebody else with tar 1.13.25-2 should be able to confirm that. -- Colin Watson [[EMAIL PROTECTED]] -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]