V
Vengent
Guest
One minor note - dist-upgrade is when you're moving entire new versions.
Are you upgrading from an old version of ubuntu to a newer one?
Generally speaking, with apt you want to just use "apt-get update", "apt-get upgrade"
Other than that, I would set up the sources.list to utilize the normal ubuntu repository (it does have php5 in it, right?)
then do an
apt-get install php5 php5-cgi php5-cli php5-common php5-curl php5-gd php5-ldap php5-mhash php5-mysql php5-mysqli php5-odbc
php5-recode php5-xmlrpc php5-xsl
The "kept" back usually means something has flagged them as not upgradeable, but you can bypass that by directly calling them with install.
Try that, then if that works, try an update/upgrade.
I haven't used ubuntu much, but I've done this on debian 3.1 and 4 lots of times, trying to find the best upgrade path from Sarge to Etch.
Are you upgrading from an old version of ubuntu to a newer one?
Generally speaking, with apt you want to just use "apt-get update", "apt-get upgrade"
Other than that, I would set up the sources.list to utilize the normal ubuntu repository (it does have php5 in it, right?)
then do an
apt-get install php5 php5-cgi php5-cli php5-common php5-curl php5-gd php5-ldap php5-mhash php5-mysql php5-mysqli php5-odbc
php5-recode php5-xmlrpc php5-xsl
The "kept" back usually means something has flagged them as not upgradeable, but you can bypass that by directly calling them with install.
Try that, then if that works, try an update/upgrade.
I haven't used ubuntu much, but I've done this on debian 3.1 and 4 lots of times, trying to find the best upgrade path from Sarge to Etch.