2020-05-28T20:19:09ZFluxBBhttps://dev1galaxy.org/viewtopic.php?id=3547OK. I ran apt-get install fdisk and part of the actions said that fdisk was set to manual install. If I understand now, fdisk was only installed as a dependency of some other packages, and those were either removed or removed fdisk from their dependencies. I thought fdisk was one of the basic installed utilities, but I guess it is not. Thank you.]]>https://dev1galaxy.org/profile.php?id=47662020-05-28T20:19:09Zhttps://dev1galaxy.org/viewtopic.php?pid=22161#p22161Do you actually understand what the autoremove option does?
If you want to keep fdisk than either install it explicitly or run
]]>https://dev1galaxy.org/profile.php?id=55812020-05-28T20:09:03Zhttps://dev1galaxy.org/viewtopic.php?pid=22159#p22159No luck. I checked fdisk dependency requirements, and all the packages were installed and with version requirements met. I looked through the pre-depends and I could not see any in the list of yesterday's upgrades. Curious. Of course, I could have missed something, but I don't think so.]]>https://dev1galaxy.org/profile.php?id=47662020-05-28T19:56:33Zhttps://dev1galaxy.org/viewtopic.php?pid=22158#p22158i also have fdisk installed in ceres/amd64, but seen no such thing in upgrade/autoremove. it seems another package was to blame.. check apt.log to see what recent packages installed/removed might have caused this..]]>https://dev1galaxy.org/profile.php?id=48532020-05-28T07:27:50Zhttps://dev1galaxy.org/viewtopic.php?pid=22150#p22150I ran my usual apt-get update and apt-get upgrade --autoremove on a ceres installation in a qemu-kvm vm today. All went well, but when I reran the apt-get upgrade --autoremove, as I usually do, it was going to remove fdisk. That just does not seem right. I said no for now.]]>https://dev1galaxy.org/profile.php?id=47662020-05-27T21:58:00Zhttps://dev1galaxy.org/viewtopic.php?pid=22146#p22146