"apt-get" is a convenience feature of debian, precision is /not/ what it
does. Requesting one action may do other things if other actions are
still pending. Run apt-get upgrade (or, if it's your thing,
dist-upgrade) before running apt-get install for a more realistic view
of what is going on.
David Quinn wrote:
> I want to install subversion on our debian server. However, when I
> run 'Apt-get install subversion', I get the following list of actions:
>
> Reading Package Lists... Done
> Building Dependency Tree... Done
> The following extra packages will be installed:
> db4.3-util e2fslibs e2fsprogs libapr0 libc6 libc6-dev libdb4.3 libneon24
> libssl0.9.8 libsvn0 libxml2
> Suggested packages:
> gpart parted e2fsck-static glibc-doc manpages-dev subversion-tools
> Recommended packages:
> xml-core
> The following packages will be REMOVED:
> initrd-tools kernel-image-2.6.3-1-386 locales
> The following NEW packages will be installed:
> db4.3-util libdb4.3 libneon24 libssl0.9.8 libsvn0 libxml2 subversion
> The following packages will be upgraded:
> e2fslibs e2fsprogs libapr0 libc6 libc6-dev
> 5 upgraded, 7 newly installed, 3 to remove and 210 not upgraded.
> Need to get 13.9MB of archives.
> After unpacking 34.2MB disk space will be freed.
> Do you want to continue? [Y/n]
>
> it wants to remove kernel-image-2.6.3-1-386 which worries me as it
> shows no indication of installing a replacement for it. Is this normal?
>
> Regards
>
> David
>
---------------------------------------------------------------------
To unsubscribe, e-mail: users-unsubscribe@subversion.tigris.org
For additional commands, e-mail: users-help@subversion.tigris.org
Received on Fri Feb 17 13:15:31 2006