How shall I report a bug in the .deb packaging itself?
Julian Andres Klode
jak at debian.org
Mon Dec 21 15:13:40 UTC 2015
On Mon, Dec 21, 2015 at 04:10:31PM +0100, Alberto Salvia Novella wrote:
> Julian Andres Klode:
> > If A suggests B, and you install B in some way, you may have come to
> > rely on the fact that A is extended by B on your system.
> > Automatically removing B could thus cause an unexpected loss of
> > functionality.
>
> The point I do not understand is why after removing A, being A the only that
> recommends B from all the packages installed by the user, B is still
> considered needed.
>
> Is it because a previously installed package recommends B but didn't install
> it? Or because the new set up makes the dependency tree to recommend itself?
Cycles are also possible, but less likely. Usually it is a Suggests from
another existing package, as I have explained about three times already.
I also wrote I am thinking about adding some kind of apt revert command
that allows you to revert entries from apt's history.log, which would allow
you to undo install commands.
But that's sort-of-dangerous in many cases (everything involving an
upgrade), and most likely only works for the latest change.
--
Julian Andres Klode - Debian Developer, Ubuntu Member
See http://wiki.debian.org/JulianAndresKlode and http://jak-linux.org/.
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