* Vadym Krevs
On 30/05/17 20:58, Patrick Shanahan wrote:
* Vadym Krevs
[05-30-17 12:02]: On 16/05/17 10:07, Luca Beltrame wrote:
In data martedì 16 maggio 2017 11:01:46 CEST, Vadym Krevs ha scritto:
http://download.opensuse.org/repositories/KDE:/Qt5/openSUSE_Leap_42.2/ seems to contain a weird mixture of Qt 5.7.1 and Qt 5.8. KDE:Qt5 has been rolled back to 5.7.1 due to 5.8 being unsuitable (and being de facto a throwaway release by the Qt Project). Please report which packages are still on 5.8 so we can adjust, if need be.
Broken again ...
# zypper -v dup -d Verbosity: 1 Warning: You are about to do a distribution upgrade with all enabled repositories. Make sure these repositories are compatible before you continue. See 'man zypper' for more information about this command.
you do realize you shouldn't be using "dup" for Leap. and it may be contributing to your continuing problems, re: "Broken again ..."
Is there an actual technical reason for your recommendation?
from the opensuse list:
Date: Tue, 25 Apr 2017 15:20:34 -0700
From: Fraser_Bell
Running Leap 42.2 on my pi and out of curiosity I ran zypper dup to see what would show up. It looks like it wants to install a bunch of graphical applications and I'm not sure why, could someone explain this to me?
This is a minimal install from the JeOS image. I pasted the output on susepaste here: http://susepaste.org/16775081
Regards, Bryon
zypper dup is for a distribution upgrade (that is, say from openSUSE 42.1 to 42.2, or 42.2 to 42.3). The only exception is Tumbleweed, since it is a rolling release, each release is effectively a "distribution upgrade", in a way, so zypper dup is used for updating Tumbleweed. If you do a zypper dup, it will want to switch all packages back to the main repos when there is a higher version number, among other things, and it can also give you unexpected results if you have other repos enabled. Your only use of zypper dup, in Leap, would be if the system is messed up and you want to return it to a closer state to the original install. But, then, your best bet would be to use the install DVD and choose and "Upgrade". Hope that explains it sufficiently for you. -- -Gerry Makaro aka Fraser_Bell on the forums, IRC, and mail at openSUSE.org the best explanation I have seen. and there is also "man zypper" and zypper dup --help zypper up --help and google. -- (paka)Patrick Shanahan Plainfield, Indiana, USA @ptilopteri http://en.opensuse.org openSUSE Community Member facebook/ptilopteri Registered Linux User #207535 @ http://linuxcounter.net Photos: http://wahoo.no-ip.org/piwigo paka @ IRCnet freenode -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse-kde+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse-kde+owner@opensuse.org