On Lu, 10 nov 14, 18:20:37, Tanstaafl wrote:
> On 11/10/2014 6:18 PM, Michael Biebl <biebl@debian.org> wrote:
> > Am 11.11.2014 um 00:14 schrieb Miles Fidelman:
> >
> >> Ok, then explain to me the procedure for running the installer in such a
> >> way that systemd is never installed, thus avoiding any potential
> >> problems that might result from later uninstallation all the
> >> dependencies that systemd brings in with it.
>
> > Please be specific. What problems of of dependencies are you talking about?
>
> Objection: relevancy.
Overruled :p
You made a claim that installing systemd would pull in other packages
vie dependencies, that are later difficult to remove.
Please provide some proof to this claim. You could start from here:
$ dpkg-query -W -f='Essential: ${Essential}\tPriority: ${Priority}\t${Package}\n' \
> $(dpkg-query -W -f='${Depends}\n' systemd | sed -e 's/,\ /\n/g' | sed -e 's/\ \(.*\)//') \
> | grep -v 'Essential: yes' | grep -v 'Priority: \(required\|important\)'
Essential: no Priority: optional acl
Essential: no Priority: optional libaudit1
Essential: no Priority: standard libcap2
Essential: no Priority: optional libcap2-bin
Essential: no Priority: optional libcryptsetup4
Essential: no Priority: optional libsystemd0
Kind regards,
Andrei
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