I work in intel (contracter) but this is a machine at home. I have explicit instructions (read warnings) not to attempt to put a linux machine on the intel network. However I will be providing limited support for linux (I work on the helpdesk) from next week. Only machines that connect to intel accross the web using vpn. but its a start
I see I explained myself badly with my problem, I'd created a Packages.gz for some local debs using dpkg-scanpackages, made a typo in it and didnt notice until after i'd aded it to sources.list and ran apt-get update and tried to install some packages from it. Then I couldnt get rid of the packages even after commenting out the listing from sources.list and running apt-get update again. Then while getting the log I found out what is wrong. My fixed Packages.gz still has the wrong path in it! I'll fix that and if I cant fix it i'll be back! -----Original Message----- From: ben [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: 21 April 2002 10:26 To: debian-user@lists.debian.org Subject: Re: apt-cache On Sunday 21 April 2002 02:18 am, Satelle, StevenX wrote: > Does anyone know how to clear the cache for apt. I dont mean /var/cache/apt > I mean when I start to install some packages using dselect after making a > mistake in the sources.list, it reads it into the cache but cant install. > I've manualy gone in and unselected the packages put if I say install after > that this what i'm returned: > Reading Package Lists... > Building Dependency Tree... > 59 packages upgraded, 0 newly installed, 0 to remove and 0 not upgraded. > Need to get 0B/24.7MB of archives. After unpacking 73.4MB will be used. > Do you want to continue? [Y/n] > Err file - a rake of package names it cant install despite saying it has > nothing to install > > I cant clear this cache, I dont even know where it is getting it from. I've > even tried a REBOOT! any help appreciated post the error messages. everything you've posted here doesn't indicate what you're problem is about, and really doesn't give anyone a clue as to what the actual problem is. apart from that, are you really at intel? is intel encouraging its employees to run debian? alright! ben -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED] -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]