D Hoyem <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: DH> Being a Debian newbie and running Potato2.2r on a PII DH> 350 this is the course of action that I'm thinking of DH> taking to do a upgrade to Woody is it flawed? DH> 1. Do a apt-get install on Adrin Bunk's .deb files DH> 2. Do a apt-get install kernel 2.4.3 image and DH> headers. DH> Question...Once I do the kernel install how do I DH> install the updated ppp that I said no to when I did DH> the Adrin update? DH> 3. Add the deb-src lines from Dave's Debians Doc's DH> at dharris.freeshell.org/linux
What are these particular sources? AFAIK they aren't essential to running the Debian testing distribution... DH> 4 Do a apt-get update woody. DH> 5. Do a apt-get source woody. DH> 6. Do dpkg-buildpackage -uc -b DH> 7. Comment out the deb-src lines then do a dpkg -i DH> woody.deb It sounds like you're confused on what 'woody' is. It's not a single package; it's a constantly-updated version of all of Debian that's newer than stable (currently 'potato') and (in theory) less broken than unstable ('sid'). You described yourself as a Debian newbie. Why do you want to run woody? If it breaks, are you prepared to fix it? Unless you already have a good understanding of Unix/Linux/Debian, I'd recommend you stick with the stable distribution since it will Just Work, a guarantee that can't be made for either testing or unstable. -- David Maze [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://people.debian.org/~dmaze/ "Theoretical politics is interesting. Politicking should be illegal." -- Abra Mitchell