On Mi, 29 apr 20, 09:35:12, Dale Harris wrote:
> 
> Okay, did some of that, the one that really blows up is libicu63:i386, when
> I try to install that it was to remove most of the amd64 packages.
> 
> # apt-cache policy libicu63:i386
> libicu63:i386:
>   Installed: (none)
>   Candidate: 63.1-6
>   Version table:
>      63.1-6 500
>         500 https://deb.debian.org/debian stable/main i386 Packages
> 
> Compared to it's amd64 package:
> 
> # apt-cache policy libicu63
> libicu63:
>   Installed: 63.1-6+deb10u1
>   Candidate: 63.1-6+deb10u1
>   Version table:
>  *** 63.1-6+deb10u1 100
>         100 /var/lib/dpkg/status
>      63.1-6 500
>         500 https://deb.debian.org/debian stable/main amd64 Packages

Apparently your system has received the security update for amd64, but 
not for i386.

My guess is this the reason for the divergence between the amd64 and 
i386 on your system and you should look into it.

> if I try to install...
> 
> # apt install libicu63:i386
> 
> Reading package lists... Done
> Building dependency tree
> Reading state information... Done
> The following packages were automatically installed and are no longer
> required:
>   acl alsa-utils ant ant-contrib ant-optional at-spi2-core atril-common
> bubblewrap ca-certificates-java
>   coinor-libcbc3 coinor-libcgl1 coinor-libclp1 coinor-libcoinmp1v5
> coinor-libcoinutils3v5

Full output would have been better here. Automatically installed 
packages that *may* be removed are not a problem, what apt wants to 
actually remove is.

Kind regards,
Andrei
-- 
http://wiki.debian.org/FAQsFromDebianUser

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