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Some Potato->Woody upgrade feedback ...



Hello,

I thought I should make my experiences available to those that might be
interested.

It was a not-very complete potato install, that I wanted to upgrade to
woody. I had potato CD's, and woody ftp sources in the sources.list.
apt-get upgrade complained about libdb.so.3 not being available. On my
own unstable machine I saw this was in  the libdb2 package. I ended up
downloading this package with ftp and installing it with dpkg -i. This
should probably be smoother when woody is released?

(Here is the error messages I got when trying to install packages with
apt-get:
perl: error while loading shared libraries: libdb.so.3: cannot open
shared object file: No such file or directory
E: Sub-process /usr/sbin/dpkg-preconfigure --apt returned an error code (127)
E: Failure running script /usr/sbin/dpkg-preconfigure --apt
)

Another rather confusing thing I noticed was due to the X3->X4 upgrade
not going as smooth as one would hope. Specifically, after the upgrade,
startx was no longer available, as xbase-clients wasn't installed with
the upgrade. I don't know what the solution would be, it is nice that
one can do a "partial" X installation (with only the very necessary
packages) but this is going to be confusing. 

Oh, the exim upgrade didn't work - it didn't create the /etc/exim
directory before trying to move the config file. I'll check the BTS and
submit a report if this isn't reported yet.

Still being a fan of dselect (Is there another way to get a nice list of
all the new packages available? - and I like the control dselect gives
the user over dependency resolution...), this is the first time I've
really tried such an upgrade with "apt-get dist-upgrade". The man page
claims apt-get upgrade does not change any package's "Install Status".
I don't quite understand all the extra things dist-upgrade is supposed
to do. (Upgrades more important packages at expense of less important
ones, this means it will additionally upgrade the more important
ones even if it means removing the less important ones - what about
actually installing new packages? IIRC there were a lot of packages
that it didn't upgrade at all - so I went back to the trusty dselect...)

Thanks,
Hugo van der Merwe

ps. I'll appreciate a CC (as Mail-Followup-To: should say), as my
mailbox cannot handle debian-devel.
-- 
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