Hi there,
I have no use for Java on a headless file server, and for some reason
every time I upgrade anything on one particular system (using apt) the
tool whines about certain Java packages being 'kept back'. I have
little idea why they were installed on the system in the first place,
still less why they were being 'kept back' - whatever that's supposed
to mean.
Many times I have tried to uninstall the offending packages, but apt
refuses to simply uninstall them - it insists on installing about a
dozen other packages to replace the ones I'm trying to get rid of (and
I don't want those fackages either). So today I got the bit between
my teeth and decided once and for all to get rid of openjdk-6-jre and
if necessary anything else that had to be deleted in order to get rid
of it once and for all.
I found that the problem appeared to be a circular dependency. When I
removed all the packages in the dependency loop in a single operation
things went much more smoothly.
dpkg -B -r libaccess-bridge-java-jni libaccess-bridge-java openjdk-6-jre
Debian is commended for how easy it has made it to install packages.
It would be commended still more if it were as easy to remove them.
--
73,
Ged.
--
To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-user-requ...@lists.debian.org
with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org
Archive:
https://lists.debian.org/pine.lnx.4.64.1407091050390.17...@mail5.jubileegroup.co.uk