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not sure what the hell happened this morning, but...
Re: not sure what the hell happened this morning, but...
No, I don't think so. What you are seeing (most likely) is the upgrade of those packages to KDE 4.6.2. You aren't showing us the rest of the output - the packages that will be installed/upgraded.
If you have doubts then rerun the command 'simulated':
Code:
sudo apt-get dist-upgrade --simulate
You will be shown what 'would' happen.
Windows no longer obstructs my view.
Using Kubuntu Linux since March 23, 2007.
"It is a capital mistake to theorize before one has data." - Sherlock Holmes
Re: not sure what the hell happened this morning, but...
Yup. I figured "what the hell" and ran it anyway since a restore's pretty easy. It pretty much ate KDE and wouldn't boot at all unless you were in single-user mode.
we see things not as they are, but as we are. -- anais nin
Re: not sure what the hell happened this morning, but...
Exactly some 'adventure' here. I was on 11.04 alfa, and when the 'upgrade' (from kpackagekit) borked the entire KDE (yes, I know - I should have payed attention) I went to another box and downloaded the beta. After a clean install the problem went away, so my guess is that the culprit was a buggy apt.
Re: not sure what the hell happened this morning, but...
It happened again...dist-upgrade wanted to remove 34 packages, including the entire kde. Only this time I was a bit careful and answered 'no'. After a little research I found the culprit: my (Danish) repos are borked. The solution: use synaptic and change to the 'main server'. Run 'update' and - voilá - the whole rigmarole downloaded without a hitch and everything is inorder and up-to-date.
Re: not sure what the hell happened this morning, but...
Understandable, but unfortunate. In your case, (all) the package updates didn't make it to your countries repositories "in time." Glad you discovered it before any damage was done.
Windows no longer obstructs my view.
Using Kubuntu Linux since March 23, 2007.
"It is a capital mistake to theorize before one has data." - Sherlock Holmes
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