On Mon, Oct 20, 2003 at 05:57:41PM +1000, Richard Brooks wrote:
> After having repaired the partition, and losing a few crashed sectors
> along the way . . . I lost the status file for dpkg/dselect/apt-get.
>
> Now - I cannot do any dselect/apt-get/dpkg operations without a
> segmentation fault
Richard Brooks wrote:
HELP !
All was going along swimmingly until I got a segmentation fault in a dselect operation, which resulted in me having to press the dreaded reset switch.
After having repaired the partition, and losing a few crashed sectors along the way . . . I lost the status file fo
Bruno Boettcher <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
BB> anyway i compiled that kernel also with make-kpg and wanted to install
BB> it but:
BB> dpkg: error processing kernel-image-2.4.9_Custom.1.00_i386.deb
BB> (--install):
BB> failed in buffer_write(fd) (8, ret=-1 backend dpkg-deb during
BB> `./lib/modul
On Mon, 18 Jun 2001, Iain wrote:
> I seem to have put the dpkg database into a bad state.
> I was attempting to install phpgroupware from unstable onto a potato system.
> Anyway somewhere along the installation process it screwed up so I tried to
> remove
> it.
>
> dpkg -r phpgroupware
>
> gives t
On Sun Mar 18 14:16:20 2001 Mircea Luca wrote...
>
>Stan Brown wrote:
>>
>>
>> This of course renders dselect useless!
>>
>> Help, please, how do I fix this?
>>
>
>
>kill -9 logpager
>
>before dpkg --purge
>
>should do it.
>
>Or you can remove /etc/init.d/console-log ,reboot then safely remove
Stan Brown wrote:
>
> I installled console-log, because it looked useful.
>
> However once I did that, I could not get the machine in question to shutdown
> cleanly, it always hung at shutting down console-log.
>
> So, I tried to remove it with dselect. dslect hung while suting it down alos.
>
On Mon, Mar 29, 1999 at 10:50:12PM -0700, John Galt wrote:
>
> apt-get install kernel-source-2.2.1
>
I installed the sources that way, compiled them, and then used make-dpkg to
get a deb package. But dpkg won't install the resulting deb. Is there a way
to coerce apt into installing a local file
apt-get install kernel-source-2.2.1
On Tue, 30 Mar 1999, Robbie Huffman wrote:
> Regarding:
> > > dpkg: error processing ../kernel-image-2.2.5_Boris.1.0_i386.deb
> > > (--install):
> > > subprocess dpkg-deb --fsys-tarfile returned error exit status 2
>
> On Mon, Mar 29, 1999 at 09:21:46PM -0
Regarding:
> > dpkg: error processing ../kernel-image-2.2.5_Boris.1.0_i386.deb (--install):
> > subprocess dpkg-deb --fsys-tarfile returned error exit status 2
On Mon, Mar 29, 1999 at 09:21:46PM -0700, John Galt wrote:
>
> I did--I got around it with apt: don't ask me how, it just worked. IIRC
I did--I got around it with apt: don't ask me how, it just worked. IIRC
dselect also worked the one time I tried during my dpkg hiatus. It ironed
itself out in time and possibly updates, but I can't remember if dpkg or
gzip got updated since then :(
On Mon, 29 Mar 1999, Robbie Huffman wrote:
On Wed, Dec 31, 1997 at 04:47:31PM -0500, Robert D. Hilliard wrote:
> > From: "Albert Hurd" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> > Cc: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> I believe there is only one underscore in the file name. Try
> "xisp_2.1-1.deb"
Yes, I find that Netscape 4 loves to change all-but-one of the dots
in
> From: "Albert Hurd" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Cc: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
I believe there is only one underscore in the file name. Try
"xisp_2.1-1.deb"
^
Bob
On Tue, 30 Dec 1997, Albert Hurd writes:
>
> I tried dpkg -i (and cp) on xisp_2_1-1(1).deb and got the following
> message:
It appears that you've downloaded the file xisp_2.1-1.deb with win95 and
ie, which then changed the file name to xisp_2_1-1(1).deb (another ms
feature, I guess). You can change the name back to its original with Linux
or win95, or download it again and set the name correctly when win95 asks
for t
"Albert Hurd" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> I tried dpkg -i (and cp) on xisp_2_1-1(1).deb and got the following
> message:
>
>syntax error near unexpected token `xisp_2_1-1(1'
>
> What gives and how can I install the package. Any help very welcome for
> this newbie.
>
I believe this
I am getting exactly these same errors, and have been since installation.
I heard somewhere (I think in an advocacy group) that one version of
Debian had some sim link problems that I suspect might be causing this.
Mayby the package you were installing is the culprit.
> # xman&
> [2] 1429
> # xm
first of all, thanks to the people how tried
to help me out with this rather odd problem.
i followed the suggestions, but without success -
as far as up/downgrading is concerned:
my system is a rex/bo mix, and the problems
seemed to start when i installed libc5 from
hamm - i guess that my mixing o
> > That a mistake by the maintainer, and archive maintainer is on vacation, so
> > this problem never got corrected. It will be corrected with next release
> > of
> > libc5, I assume.
> >
> > >
> > > Always with the same error:
> > >
> > > ldconfig: warning: can't open /usr/X11R6/lib/usr/l
> That a mistake by the maintainer, and archive maintainer is on vacation, so
> this problem never got corrected. It will be corrected with next release of
> libc5, I assume.
>
> >
> > Always with the same error:
> >
> > ldconfig: warning: can't open /usr/X11R6/lib/usr/lib/libc5-compat
> > (
> Igor Grobman wrote:
> >
> > Looks like the installation of libc5, an essential package failed. Download
> > it
> > from debian/stable/binary-i386/libs and install with dpkg -i libc5*deb
> >
>
> yup, that's what i tried right after my original post -
> and i tried it again after reading your r
On 5 Jul, Reto Andreas Bachmann wrote:
> in particular though: Which package creates the file
> "/usr/X11R6/lib/usr/lib/libc5-compat" ?
>
$ dpkg -S libc5-compat
libc5: /usr/lib/libc5-compat
libc5: /lib/libc5-compat
$ dpkg -l libc5
Desired=Unknown/Install/Remove/Purge
| Status=Not/Installed/Conf
Igor Grobman wrote:
>
> Looks like the installation of libc5, an essential package failed. Download it
> from debian/stable/binary-i386/libs and install with dpkg -i libc5*deb
>
yup, that's what i tried right after my original post -
and i tried it again after reading your reply - with
the same
Looks like the installation of libc5, an essential package failed. Download it
from debian/stable/binary-i386/libs and install with dpkg -i libc5*deb
> Need Your Help:
>
> I was downloading some packages from "stable" so that
> I could try to build a custom kernel. While I was
> downloading a
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