This --force seems to do it perfectly, I'll take care. Thanks. Arch rules. Laurent 2012/1/4 Lars Madson <rwx700@gmail.com>
Well, the problem is actually caused by the /usr folder cause it's common to the old and recent /opt /var. So the old feel unsync with this too recent /usr folder and create conflict cause all the files are already there.
The /opt /var will be simply updated if I understand right as the pacman database is in /var, isn't it? So the database is also old.
The HDD is dead. I will rely only on the SSD till I get that second hard drive box for laptop. I definitely hate cheap hdd external box, killed so many.
So I will use the --force just for this special occasion, so glad that option exists. Nothing has to be force with arch as it's so slick :P
thank you
2012/1/4 Leonid Isaev <lisaev@umail.iu.edu>
On Wed, 4 Jan 2012 20:23:35 +0100 Lars Madson <rwx700@gmail.com> wrote:
Hi,
My system has two hard drive, one SSD with / and /home/user on two partitions and a HDD mounted on /opt and /var.
The HDD failed, and the system works with only the SSD as it was installed like this and then extended to the HDD.
Only 3 or 4 weeks of update make a difference between the content of /var and /opt on the SSD and the HDD.
Now I'm performing an upgrade of the whole system to get back to normal but all files in /usr are making conflict as the /opt and /var are older and trying to install files that are already there.
So I could - but it seems really painful - rename all the conflicting files (they are a lot), if anyone as an idea how to automatize this. Or maybe I would love some kind of option in pacman that would overwrite or ignore those conflicts, I know that's against how pacman is build so I'm asking here.
Hope I make sens.
thx Laurent
You could use the -f option but I wonder if this is more troublesome and time-consuming than a simple reinstall.
-- Leonid Isaev GnuPG key ID: 164B5A6D Key fingerprint: C0DF 20D0 C075 C3F1 E1BE 775A A7AE F6CB 164B 5A6D