OK, If you wish to get a new package that is released WITHOUT updating all existing packages that have new versions, just use apt-get to install tha package directly.
apt-get update #update the package DB apt-get install <package> Note, this WILL download and install updates to dependancies, if they are needed. A feature I would like to see (and one that I am not convinced doesn't exist) is to be able to tell dpkg/apt/dselect to change current package selections to match the current state of the system. Bryan On 15-Sep-99 Michael Talbot-Wilson wrote: > G'day, all. > > How can I prevent dselect from downloading packages that are already > installed, merely because the Debian version has changed? > > Really, it is intolerable that that happens. It can cost a lot of money > in download fees. > > I have attepted to defeat it by general freezes, but that makes it a lot > of work to select something when I want to upgrade. It is made worse by > the terrible practice of splitting up the author's source into multiple > Debian packages. > > Several weeks ago I decided that my Debian system had become totally > unmaintainable. That was after I had modified a lot of selections so I > could install something, and dselect for some reason told me that if I > went ahead it would uninstall 90% of my system. I guess, instead of > looking at thousands of listed packages I was doing group selections. > > I have reached total lockup. > > Please reply to the list, because I'm not going to ask again if no > replies show up. Apologies if you've recently discussed it - I've > resubscribed to the list only to ask this question. > > Regards, > Michael Talbot-Wilson > > > > -- > Unsubscribe? mail -s unsubscribe [EMAIL PROTECTED] < > /dev/null