-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA1 On Friday 14 November 2003 06:22 am, Benjamin Rutt wrote: > I had a debian stable system that was running well. Then, I wanted > to try out some parts of the unstable packages, but without fully > going to unstable. So I followed instructions for apt-pinning at > > http://jaqque.sbih.org/kplug/apt-pinning.html > > and installed some packages via e.g. "apt-get -t unstable install > foo". > > But now, the C library has been replaced, and I'm having problems > starting some applications, and I have decided that I want to > downgrade back to stable. How can I clean all unstable packages from > my system, and go back to stable? Is there way dpkg can tell whether > a package came from {stable, testing, unstable}? Or can I do that > somehow with apt? > > Thanks, > -- > Benja
You can do 'apt-get install libc6/woody'. I think that is the right syntax, it was posted on this list not to long ago. It will downgrade the libraries, didn't do 'locales' or any of the other depends that came with the original upgrade of libc6, I did those the same way, hopefully remembering what they all where. If you use the '-s' option with apt-get (apt-get -s install xxx) it will show you what is going to happen witout actually installing aything. - -- Greg Madden Debian GNU/Linux -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v1.2.2 (GNU/Linux) iD8DBQE/tQMNk7rtxKWZzGsRAof5AKC7sZWoPCnya2g0Nh5CGWii3t5YpgCghCyK 3x7p4WGy9oMMihLOoxPxRqk= =A0GO -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]