On Mon, 01 Apr 2024 18:05:47 -0400,
Dale wrote:
> 
> John Covici wrote:
> > Hi.  Well, I followed the steps in the news item,  to move
> > todefault/linux/amd64/23.0/desktop/gnome/systemd
> >
> > and it all worked till it wants me to emerge  the whole world file.
> > Here is what I get:
> >
> > emerge --ask --emptytree @world
> >
> > These are the packages that would be merged, in order:
> >
> > Calculating dependencies  .... done!
> > Dependency resolution took 4.58 s (backtrack: 0/200).
> >
> >
> > !!! Problems have been detected with your world file
> > !!! Please run emaint --check world
> >
> >
> > !!! Ebuilds for the following packages are either all
> > !!! masked or don't exist:
> > www-apps/nextcloud:26.0.10
> >
> > emerge: there are no ebuilds to satisfy
> > "sys-kernel/gentoo-sources:6.1.69".
> > (dependency required by "@kernels" [set])
> > (dependency required by "@selected" [set])
> > (dependency required by "@world" [argument])
> >
> > I don't want to unmerge that kernel -- its my backup kernel, so I
> > definitely want to keep it.  I am using the nextcloud they are
> > complaining about , I will upgrade it soon, but I want to keep it for
> > now.
> >
> > So, should I just not do the whole world file at all -- do I really
> > need to do that, or wait till I upgrade nextcloud and till I am no
> > longer using that kernel and then do it?
> >
> > Thanks in advance for any suggestions.
> >
> 
> 
> I ran into the problem of it complaining about my world file too. 
> Running the command it gave didn't show any problems.  I went ahead with
> the rest of the change.  After it was all done, that error went away on
> its own.  No idea what triggered it or what removed the trigger.  Must
> be something to do with the profile switching process.  You can likely
> ignore that for now.  See if it goes away for you too. 
> 
> I don't know what nascloud is but the error says it is masked or not
> there at all.  I'd suspect the mask part since there are several
> versions in the tree.  You may want to check your package.mask file and
> see if there is something in there that masks it.  Could be you meant to
> add the entry to keyword or unmask file but hit the wrong file.  Did
> that once myself.  One easy way to see if it exists or is masked, use
> this command, provided you have the package for it installed.  I think
> gentools has this command.
> 
> 
> root@fireball / # equery list -p www-apps/nextcloud
>  * Searching for nextcloud in www-apps ...
> [-P-] [  ] www-apps/nextcloud-26.0.8:26.0.8
> [-P-] [ ~] www-apps/nextcloud-26.0.11:26.0.11
> [-P-] [ ~] www-apps/nextcloud-26.0.12:26.0.12
> [-P-] [  ] www-apps/nextcloud-27.1.5:27.1.5
> [-P-] [ ~] www-apps/nextcloud-27.1.6:27.1.6
> [-P-] [ ~] www-apps/nextcloud-27.1.7:27.1.7
> [-P-] [  ] www-apps/nextcloud-28.0.1:28.0.1
> [-P-] [  ] www-apps/nextcloud-28.0.2:28.0.2
> [-P-] [ ~] www-apps/nextcloud-28.0.3:28.0.3
> root@fireball / #
> 
> 
> Yours should look something like that. 
> 
> For the kernels, I don't upgrade the kernel as much as I should.  I keep
> all versions masked except the ones I have installed and I add those
> versions to the world file, that way --depclean and other stuff, won't
> remove or complain so much about it.  Just emerge -n --select y =<your
> kernel name and version here>.  Don't forget the equal sign when
> including the version. 
> 
> Hope one or more of those things help. 
> 

My kernels are not in the world file at all, so I am confused why
portage should care about them when I am updating the world file.  My
question is why do I  need to do this at all -- could I just keep
updating as normal?

-- 
Your life is like a penny.  You're going to lose it.  The question is:
How do
you spend it?

         John Covici wb2una
         cov...@ccs.covici.com

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