[Date Prev][Date Next] [Thread Prev][Thread Next] [Date Index] [Thread Index]

Dselect: Is it being redeveloped?



Greetings list,

Last week, at the Usenix conference, I received a free CD copy of Debian 
1.3.  The CD is labeled with Novare' on it, if that matters.

Anyway, I figured it was time to rebuild my current Linux system.  I am 
running Red Hat's version 3.0.3 that has been upgraded and patched with 
both RPMs and manual software builds, etc.  I did a safe thing, brought 
the box to single user mode and did two tars to my 8mm drive.  One tar 
was of the /home partition and the other tar was of everything except the 
home partition and the /proc system.  I am glad I did those backups as 
you will read later.

I merrily read some of the quick READMEs and made my boot floppy.  I 
cross my fingers issue the shutdown command from my old faithfully 
running system and wait while the reboot happens.  All is good so far.  
Debian boots from the floppy and starts asking me relevant installation 
questions.  I go ahead and reformat checking for bad blocks my /dev/sda2 
and /dev/sda3 (and /dev/sda4 - swap) partitions.  Things go smoothly up 
until now.  

The system does some work and reboots if I remember correctly, ultimately 
I end up at the Dselect tool screen.  I was really feeling confident 
because the install was working well.  This is where things started to 
get interesting.

Dselect displayed a large list of packages, and had some recommended for 
installation others were not marked for installation.  I understand 
that.  I looked at the packages and figured, what the heck and Dselect do 
its thing.  It read many packages from my cd-rom and a bit of time later 
wanted a reboot (I think).  I then started Dselect again this time 
choosing packages such as Sendmail (to replace smail) and a few others.  
The Dselect tool was quite confusing and was not easy for me to figure 
out with regards to packages already installed.  I saw numerous "*", "-", 
"_", etc.  I read the help pages but they were sorely lacking good solid 
information.  I thought to myself, this can't be that hard.  I have been 
running Linux for a while now and can hobble together my missing packages 
like X later after I get the networking ironed out, etc.

Well.. To make a long and windy email message more concise I will say 
that I spent more time fiddling with dip (to get my static IP slip stuff 
working) and had loads of trouble.  Feeling plenty depressed I resorted 
to recovering my old working system from those two tar tapes I made.  
Many hours later the system was back to its old state.

The real question I pose after all of this dribble is, has Dselect been 
revised or changed with the advent of 1.3.1 or 2.0?  I think I can get 
over the changes in how the /etc/rc.d/ startup scripts behaviour as 
compared to Red Hat linux (at least the version of RH that I was running) 
and the other small oddities, but what I am hoping for is possible a more 
user intuitive package tool.

Now, I was REALLY impressed by the installation tool when it installed 
Sendmail, asking me for relevant information about my mail setup.  I do 
not think that Red Hat offers that (and asking those questions and doing 
a config of the software is a good thing) and its little gems like that 
that are keeping me interested in Debian as opposed to rushing out and 
getting RHh 5.1.x and setting it up.

Thanks for letting me take your time to ramble and vent a bit.  I do 
really hope some work is under way with regards to a more polished Dselect.

Thanks,
Rod



Rod Troch  N2ZVV                             | 
troch@texas.com                              | Don't mess with TEXAS.
http://www.texas.com/                        | 
ftp://lonestar.texas.com/                    | FTP for PGP key



--  
To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-user-request@lists.debian.org
with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmaster@lists.debian.org


Reply to: