-----Original Message----- From: James Zuelow <james_zue...@ci.juneau.ak.us> To: debian-user@lists.debian.org <debian-user@lists.debian.org> Subject: RE: Unable to connect to my home wireless Date: Thu, 20 May 2010 15:13:35 -0800
> I hoped at least the first part of the mail would be helpful > to someone having > the same problem. I found a few posts with the same error > during the last, but > no answer so far. > > > IMO complaints should go to bugs.debian.org, > > not necessarily here. > > Noted. > > Th. In Thomas' defense, I noticed the same thing and had much the same reaction. The Squeeze KDE 4.4 update this week pulled down network-manager as a dependency. In my case I much prefer wicd to handle my wireless. The update had them both running simultaneously, which I didn't like at all. I was plugged into my wired network, which wicd had set up as default, and network-manger connected to one of the wireless networks I had configured. Both interfaces up, even two default routes. Yuk. I didn't like the fact that the KDE update ignored my current install of wicd to install network-manager, and when I purged network-manager KDE worked (and continues to work) just fine. So the "dependency" on network-manager seems to be merely a preference of the KDE team. To me that means I should not have seen network-manager if I already had wicd installed. This is very similar to the various packages that insist they need avahi-daemon to work, and yet purging avahi-daemon doesn't break anything not using mDNS. So while Thomas could file a bug, I don't think it's not germane to complain about DDs putting everything under the sun into a dependency list. Here's the place for the community to decide whether we really need to force an install of network-manager (or avahi) when they're not really needed, or decide that because some cases might require it everyone should have it. Anyway, just my 2c James ------------------------------------ Only time I have incurred this is when I have preferences set to include "recommended" files as "dependencies" thereby passing control of the upgrade to the system. Not a good idea BTW!! I use synaptic most of the time & I suspect aptitude has a similar setting. command line updates do not have this issue.:-) -- John Foster -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-user-requ...@lists.debian.org with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org Archive: http://lists.debian.org/1274417163.21582.3.ca...@brutus