On Sat, Jan 27, 2001 at 06:36:56AM -0800, grey Moon-Wolf wrote:
> Could you please explain, how does it clear itself up
> in "a day or two"?

Debian currently maintains three versions, all of which are publically-
accessible:

unstable (sid) - The latest and greatest.  Package maintainers are
updating it daily to make fixes or include new features from the
upstream source.  Despite the name, it's generally pretty solid and
if any killer problems are introduced (such as Carl's g++ dependency
problem), users invariably find them quickly (a lot of people run
unstable on non-critical boxes) and they're generally fixed by the
package maintainers the next day.

testing (woody) - Testing was just introduced within the last couple
of months.  Packages are automatically copied from unstable to testing
when they meet certain criteria, including having gone 2 weeks without
being changed, not having any critical bugs, and having all dependencies
present in testing.  This 2-week delay smooths out most of the problems
that pop up in unstable, but it's not quite as current.

stable (potato) - The latest official release version.  Aside from
security updates, stable only changes once every few months when a
point release comes out.  When reviewers complain about Debian having
an absurdly long release cycle and only including outdated versions of
software, they're talking about stable.

So, to more directly answer your question, Carl's dependency problem
should go away soon (and may have gone away already) as a result of
gcc's maintainer submitting an updated gcc package to unstable which
will satisfy the version constraint in the current unstable g++ package.

-- 
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and at home. - SGI job posting
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