You probably won't have to do anything special. What is the 'fairly common source' you speak of?
A month ago, I upgraded from potato (stable) to woody (testing, and soon to be stable). In potato, my KDE 2.1 packages came from kde.tdyc.com. The KDE packages are part of woody, so I only had one soure for all my woody packages. (By 'source', I basically mean a line in /etc/apt/sources.list) The upgrade had no problems whatsoever. Though the sources changed, it didn't matter because the KDE source (kde.tdyc.com) was designed to work with the official debian distros. So the upgrade worked as smoothly as if KDE was in potato. My experience above is slightly different from what you're asking about, since I went from KDE 2.1 in potato to KDE 2.1 in woody. But it will be the same: apt will automagically replace older packages with newer ones, regardless of their sources. Best, Aaron On Thursday 06 September 2001 10:03, Greg Wiley wrote: > Good day all- > > On a Debian Potato, I am using KDE 2.1 packages that > are, obviously, not part of Potato but are from a fairly > common source. > > Since KDE 2.2 is slated for inclusion in the upcoming > Debian release, what is the best way to prepare for the > upgrade? I cannot assume that the new packages will > be aware of the old and will upgrade them automatically > ( will they?). So, am I best off finding every trace of > the non-Debian KDE and eradicating or will things just > sort of work out if I leave it all alone? Any suggestions? > > Thanks, > > -=greg