<div dir="ltr">I *think* 3900 is the culprit. I remember getting one version error upgrading from 3901 to 3904 and thinking 'strange, I must have forgotten to save some trivial package change'. After making more substantial changes now I'm getting over a dozen version errors going from 3904 to 3911.</div><br><div class="gmail_quote"><div dir="ltr" class="gmail_attr">On Thu, Oct 10, 2019 at 8:15 PM Phil B <<a href="mailto:pbpublist@gmail.com">pbpublist@gmail.com</a>> wrote:<br></div><blockquote class="gmail_quote" style="margin:0px 0px 0px 0.8ex;border-left:1px solid rgb(204,204,204);padding-left:1ex"><div dir="ltr">Just a heads up as I haven't tracked this down yet: I believe there is a problem with the recent package dependency fixes and it's really a pain. I just attempted to rebuild my image from the latest base image and had a number of dependency errors due to wrong dependency version numbers. What appears to be happening is that, at least sometimes, when I change and save a package with dependencies it is incrementing both the package version number and the version number of at least some of the dependencies even though they haven't changed. I'm fairly certain of this after checking a couple of the dependency version numbers and they can't be right because file timestamps of the target packages haven't changed in over a month.<div><br></div><div>In case the above isn't clear: given package A which has a dependency on package B. Make some changes to A and save. When you attempt to reload, package A may now indicated a dependency which requires a version (or multiple versions) higher than what package B provides.<br></div></div>
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