On Fri, Apr 30, 2010 at 02:21:47PM -0400, Huckle Berry wrote:
I replaced the apt source, ran apt-get update and let it rip. It updated the following:
freeradius-common freeradius-utils libdb4.5 libfreeradius2 libltdl-dev libltdl7 libncursesw5 libperl-dev libperl5.10 libsqlite3-0 libssl-dev libssl0.9.8 perl perl-base perl-modules python2.5 python2.5-minimal freeradius-ldap freeradius-postgresql freeradius-mysql freeradius-krb5 libtool-doc perl-doc libterm-readline-gnu-perl libterm-readline-perl-perl python2.5-doc python-profiler binfmt-support freeradius freeradius-common freeradius-utils libdb4.5 libfreeradius2 python2.5 python2.5-minimal libltdl-dev libltdl7 libncursesw5 libperl-dev libperl5.10 libsqlite3-0 libssl-dev libssl0.9.8 perl perl-base perl-modules
installation worked like a charm,
Ah, but you got too much. Now you have Perl, Python, the SSL library and all those other things with a newer version than those in karmic. That is all right now, but it means that if e.g. a security update comes out for the versions in karmic, you won't get it automatically because the version of the package you have is higher than that of the update. I advised you to avoid this situation... but now that you've already done it, it would be a good idea to restore the squeeze sources.list line at least as a comment and occasionally uncomment it and apt-get install the above package list - which will pick up any upgrades - and the comment it back. A switch to newer Ubuntu (lucid) could get all those packages to an upgradable situation, too. -- 2. That which causes joy or happiness.