On Mon, 2004-05-31 at 05:07, Mark Goldey wrote:> I hope this is the right place to post this. Apologies if not.
No, this is a debian packaging issue.
> My samba 3.0.4-3 install was working fine last night on debian 2.4.23
> unstable (see uname below) and happily tranferring large files at 77
> Mbps across my LAN (a first! but that's another story) until,
suddenly,
> it stopped and would only move data at about .05 Mbps. Investigation
> was futile, so I uninstalled Samba and then tried to reinstall. That's
> where the trouble began:
>
> FAF:~# apt-get install samba
> Reading Package Lists... Done
> Building Dependency Tree... Done
> Some packages could not be installed. This may mean that you have
> requested an impossible situation or if you are using the unstable
> distribution that some required packages have not yet been created
> or been moved out of Incoming.
>
> Since you only requested a single operation it is extremely likely that
> the package is simply not installable and a bug report against
> that package should be filed.
> The following information may help to resolve the situation:
>
> The following packages have unmet dependencies:
> samba: Depends: libcupsys2-gnutls10 (>= 1.1.20final-1) but it is not
> going to be installed
> E: Broken packages
>
> Installing libcupsys2-gnutls10 would require removing about 60 packages
> including KDE, ark, and a dozen libraries.
Samba was re-linked against a new version of CUPS, because against the
old version, there is a conflict between the SSL linked for OpenLDAP,
and the SSL linked for CUPS. (I think). Certainly the reason for this
is that starting with CUPS enabled basically killed Samba.
This was a CUPS bug, because it was liked against OpenSSL, which I
understand is 'going away' from debian, due to the licence problems, and
a Samba bug because we were linked against the old CUPS.
The problem is, the other package maintainers have not yet relinked
their packages, so they conflict.
There is nothing the Samba team, nor the Samba Debian maintainers can do
about it. Perhaps it's one of the joys of running an 'unstable'
distribution ;-)
Andrew Bartlett
--
Andrew Bartlett abartlet@pcug.org.au
Manager, Authentication Subsystems, Samba Team abartlet@samba.org
Student Network Administrator, Hawker College abartlet@hawkerc.net
http://samba.org http://build.samba.org http://hawkerc.net
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