I'm top posting because nobody should be expected to go through all that stuff.
I believe you have to decide now whether your system is going to be amd64 only or multiarch. Because you now have ia32-libs installed, that means you want to have both 32 and 64. The ia32-libs framework is the old way of supporting both, but it is going into the history book. It is replaced by multiarch, which is a big changeover. So to formally allow multiarch, you need to dump ia32-libs and its ilk, then change your arch so that it allows both, and then when you run the next apt-get update and apt-get install, you will see all hell break loose because all of the 32bit libs that were in ia32-libs will now come in as separate pacages. ANd lots an lots of otherpackages that were one-arch will have to get replaced by multiarch ones. http://wiki.debian.org/Multiarch http://wiki.debian.org/Multiarch/Implementation I would suggest you NOT try to upgrade all packages in one shot, but instead focus on groups that are manageable. For me, the 'upgrade' is not smooth, some old glibc stuff that was in /lib did not get cleanly removed, and the new install was confused by the old stuff. I posted about it in this list, a week ago. I am probably going to make a clean install once there is a long term release of Wheezy. On Wed, Jan 9, 2013 at 10:22 PM, Beco <r...@beco.cc> wrote: > On 9 January 2013 01:36, Beco <r...@beco.cc> wrote: >> PS. Some packages was kept behind. I'll post the list of packages soon. > > > Here the complete list (for the record). > > Thanks all help. > > Beco. > -- Paul E. Johnson Professor, Political Science Assoc. Director 1541 Lilac Lane, Room 504 Center for Research Methods University of Kansas University of Kansas http://pj.freefaculty.org http://quant.ku.edu -- 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/CAErODj81p3PfQHv1DFOY6QLJPjKJ8F4u=29xwhkwqnnjhr7...@mail.gmail.com