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* RE: further debian questions
@ 2002-12-26  6:24 james miller
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 6+ messages in thread
From: james miller @ 2002-12-26  6:24 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: linux-newbie

As usual, helpful suggestions, Ray. Thank you. As I often do, I seem to have 
mistakenly presumed my first exposure to a given component (Aptitude) as more 
peculiar to the context in which I encountered it (the Libranet distro) than 
it really is. So, I now learn that this is a Debian application. Thanks for 
making that clear.  Overall, my experience with the HD install of Knoppix was 
far superior to what I've had with Libranet. I went with either/both of those, 
btw Ray, because of what I've heard (and a bit of what I've seen) about 
difficulties in installing real Debian. I thought these 2 would spare me some 
newbie nightmares. At least in the case of Libranet though, it seems I was 
mistaken. In addition to other problems I've had with it, it's also not 
dealing well with my modem (for whatever unfathomable reason - I never had any 
modem problem under Knoppix). I may end up taking your advice, Ray, and just 
going with straight Debian.   James

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^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 6+ messages in thread
* RE: further debian questions
@ 2002-12-26  6:24 james miller
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 6+ messages in thread
From: james miller @ 2002-12-26  6:24 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: linux-newbie

As usual, helpful suggestions, Ray. Thank you. As I often do, I seem to have 
mistakenly presumed my first exposure to a given component (Aptitude) as more 
peculiar to the context in which I encountered it (the Libranet distro) than 
it really is. So, I now learn that this is a Debian application. Thanks for 
making that clear.  Overall, my experience with the HD install of Knoppix was 
far superior to what I've had with Libranet. I went with either/both of those, 
btw Ray, because of what I've heard (and a bit of what I've seen) about 
difficulties in installing real Debian. I thought these 2 would spare me some 
newbie nightmares. At least in the case of Libranet though, it seems I was 
mistaken. In addition to other problems I've had with it, it's also not 
dealing well with my modem (for whatever unfathomable reason - I never had any 
modem problem under Knoppix). I may end up taking your advice, Ray, and just 
going with straight Debian.   James

-
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the body of a message to majordomo@vger.kernel.org
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Please read the FAQ at http://www.linux-learn.org/faqs

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 6+ messages in thread
* Re: further debian questions
@ 2002-12-26  0:00 Heimo Claasen
  2002-12-26 17:24 ` Ray Olszewski
  0 siblings, 1 reply; 6+ messages in thread
From: Heimo Claasen @ 2002-12-26  0:00 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: linux-newbie

I feel quite confused when reading this:

> The main lesson is to stick to a single archive ... even mixing Woody and
> Sid packages is not for the inexperienced.

What, then, would be the use of "upgrades" at all" ?

And the conclusion would not be that general for installing packages
from "earlier" distributions (or their versions) either - I regularly
install a quite "old" application, which is rather demanding in its X
(server) use, with all sorts of "modern" distributions and hitherto
never had a problem with it.

The reason for that "main lesson" given then, seems rather questionable:
> Actually, missing dependencies are commonplace on all full-size Linux
> systems, because, increasingly, packages use a wide mix of libraries, far
> too many possibilities to install them all in a base install.

Commonplace indeed, and "absolutely", as they would say in a BBC
interview.

It appears to me that a response to this condition rather would be,
(a) an advice to authors (or packagers) to join clear indications of
needed third components [ - and I work with one rather experimental
development where this is done exemplarly - ], and
(b) hints about how to best handle "complicated" cases; most probably,
these would be conflicts _among_ "dependencies".

In respect to the latter, the Debian "deselect" package installation
does a good job in offering choice directly (i.e., to install a
"conflicting" component - which would then delete the earlier
installed other component it would be in conflict with -) but it is
not at all very verbose. While the Mandrake "Package Manager", for
instance, is quite better in informing what the conclict/s is/are but
leaves it to "manual" work to delete the other compondetn first in order
to install the first. And both can put a user - not only a newbie - in
a dilemma with the sametimes arcane terminology.

Though I find the most irritating types of "dependencies" being those
_on_ which a specific programme/application is built - sometimes I had
to go through four or five levels (or steps, if you want) in such a
chain only to detect that all the other dependencies are with
superfluous or obsolete progs. But to throw these out - without
playing havoc with the whole "system" - and guarding precisely what's
really needed, is enormously tiresome.

Some of the "full size" Linux installations came up to more than 90 000
files here; together with some confusing traditions (put this thing in
/bin/usr but not in /usr/bin, the other thingy precisely the other way
round, etc) and the permissions djungle, this results in quite an
invitation to intransparency and trouble potential.

(BTW, I seriously question the commonly affirmed advantages of
especially libraries sharing - in reality, quite some of them are so
highly specific that already a small change in a new version of a
programme which depends on one of them needs a new library; to be
"shared, of course.  Question is, by whom.  The whole handling of the
"system", and certainly in most cases its sheer volume, would be easier
with a more balanced judgement of program authors on what to include and
what to be "outsourced".)

((And BTW2, please don't thrash this ideological verbosity of the
"powerful" nature of the "system" in this context - it's easy enough to
show how the n! possible combinations of trouble increase with n.))

// Heimo Claasen // <hammer at revobild dot net> // Brussels 2002-12-25
The WebPlace of ReRead - and much to read  ==>  http://www.revobild.net

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^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 6+ messages in thread
* further debian questions
@ 2002-12-24 17:06 James Miller
  2002-12-24 17:55 ` Ray Olszewski
  0 siblings, 1 reply; 6+ messages in thread
From: James Miller @ 2002-12-24 17:06 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: linux-newbie

Well, I decided on what appeared to be the most user-friendly of the
commercial Debian variants to go on my machine - Libranet. So far, I'm not
as happy with it as I was with Knoppix. For one thing, it seems that
apt-getting is a restricted process under Libranet. They have an app
called "Aptitude" that, I've discovered, one should by all means use for
installing new packages. Here's the way I learned this: I noted that there
were some dependency problems with WINE (more on that later), so I decided
to apt-get it using Aptitude. I was not having much success, so I said to
myself: "why I am I screwing around with this Aptitude prophylactic when I
can just open a console and apt-get the thing?" So, that's what I did.
Well, for the first time in my breif apt-getting career, I got a message
saying there were dependency problems, and a list of the missing
dependencies. So, I says to myself: "heck, I better get those dependencies
so's I can install my prog." So, I went first after one called "libarts."
Big mistake. Installing libarts caused major portions of KDE to be
deleted: apparently what happend is that I got libarts from stable Debian,
which, as I understand it, is part of KDE and KDE in stable Debian is 2.x
while I had KDE 3.x on my Libranet system. To make a long story short, the
most expedient way of restoring KDE proved to be reinstalling Libranet.
So, I decided I may only apt-get at my own risk on this system, most of
the time being constrained by Aptitude and its peculiarities.

Here's another problem I've had. I tried to get Lyx using Aptitude, but
have again encountered dependency problems. My question regarding this is
whether dependency problems are endemic to apt-get as they are to the
package installing methods of other well-known distros? I never ran into
any dependency problems on the Knoppix test system I had when trying to
apt-get. Was I simply lucky? Are the dependecy problems I'm having
traceable to shortcomings in Aptitude, or are they part of life using
apt-get from a console as well?

Finally, does it seem to you, as it does to me, that my initial problems
with WINE are a reflection of deficiencies in the distro I'm using? I can
see no reason why I should have dependecy problems on a freshly installed
system. I was never asked during the install process whether I wanted to
leave out any libraries or anything. Rather, I selected pretty much the
default install option, adding a couple of additional package groups from
the list with which I was presented. That indicates to me that either they
have poorly constructed this distribution, leaving out key elements of an
important package, or else their Aptitude program is buggy and is wrongly
reporting dependency problems. If either of these are true, I question
whether I should go through with payment on this distro, since it seems
still to be at the beta stage.

Feedback from the more knowledgeable on this list will be appreciated.

James

PS I have not succeeded in running any program under WINE, though I have
not spent a great deal of time trying. Whether problems lie with the
dependency issues Aptitude reports, or just WINE's inherent buginess,
I cannot say for sure at this point.

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^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 6+ messages in thread

end of thread, other threads:[~2002-12-26 17:24 UTC | newest]

Thread overview: 6+ messages (download: mbox.gz follow: Atom feed
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2002-12-26  6:24 further debian questions james miller
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2002-12-26  6:24 james miller
2002-12-26  0:00 Heimo Claasen
2002-12-26 17:24 ` Ray Olszewski
2002-12-24 17:06 James Miller
2002-12-24 17:55 ` Ray Olszewski

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