On 10/17/2010 07:15 AM, Mike Chambers wrote: > On Sat, 2010-10-16 at 23:42 -0400, Bob Cochran wrote: > > >> Then I clicked 'next' and the dependency checking starts....and up comes >> a warning dialog telling me that dependencies are missing. Clicking the >> Details button reveals a list of packages that require other packages >> (often the same package name is repeated a few times in the list of >> missing dependencies.) For example, ImageMagick requires an libxml2 >> package that is missing, and the ImageMagick warning line is repeated a >> few times in the details list. Several other packages make the list, >> too. I have the choice of either exiting the install, or clicking the >> back button to adjust my package selection, or of continuing to install >> without the dependencies. >> >> I decide to click the Back button. That brought me to the package >> selection screen. On that screen, I clicked the Back button again, to >> bring me back to the installation repo list. Here I checked off the >> middle choice in the repo list ("Fedora 14 updates", if memory serves >> me.) A dialog box comes up stating it is gathering information about the >> repo, and it gathers for a very long, long time! I then click the 'next' >> button, which becomes shaded, and a freeze up happens. Things are locked >> up for a minute or two, then if I recall, a dialog box appears and >> informs me that an unexpected crash happened. I'm asked to report the >> crash. I want to do this, and I think a list of reporting choices was >> offered. I checked off Bugzilla, but when prompted for my username and >> password, I realize I've forgotten my password. > At the point above, instead of clicking the "back" button and redoing > it, just continuing the install and let it do a skip-broken type thing > and install. Then you can finish installing and/or figure out what > didn't and see what the dep issue is. AT least you have a working > system at that point. Not much you can do about dep problems until > packages are rebuilt to satisfy them. Yeah I guess I should, Mike. A part of my problem is how to "repair" a broken package installation after continuing even without the dependencies. Is there an automated process that can check every package for missing dependencies post-install, and get them fixed? So there is some amount of hesitation here. Also I'm Java-distracted. I am trying to focus on learning Java programming these days because of where my daytime job is going. Bob > -- test mailing list test@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe: https://admin.fedoraproject.org/mailman/listinfo/test