I have just attempted a dist-upgrade with bost apt-get and aptitude, and both of them want to remove gnucash from my system (sid). This seems to be busted.
At the moment there is a new gnucash-common (2.2.4-2) but no new gnucash package to match. Normally that's ok and apt will not upgrade gnucash-common, but for some reason, this time it wants to upgrade gnucash-common and remove gnucash to resolve the conflict. gnucash-common 2.4.4-2 has the following deps: Replaces: gnucash (<< 1.8.8-5) Recommends: gnucash (>= 2.2.4-2) Conflicts: gnucash (<< 2.2.4-2) So, this conflicts with gnucash 2.2.4-1 (currently installed) but does not replace it. So why would apt remove gnucash? I thought apt was only meant to remove a package itself when another replaces it. Is this a bug in apt? BTW. I'm not looking for any solutions here - i'll just wait until tomorrow or the next day and the problem will go away. I've just never seem apt try to remove something I want installed without there being a replacement. -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]