On Saturday 18 of April 2020 18:13:53 Michael Howard via trinity-users
wrote:
On 18/04/2020 17:09, Michael wrote:
> On Saturday 18 April 2020 10:40:44 am Michael Howard via trinity-users
wrote:
>> On 18/04/2020 16:33, Thierry de Coulon
wrote:
>>> On Saturday 18 April 2020 17.25:57 Michael Howard via trinity-users
wrote:
> Is there a
simple way to install TDE without sudo these days or do
> I need to build it all myself to avoid sudo?
I use TDE on Debian and OpenSuSE, and I have never installed sudo.
As far as I remember it worked on Ubuntu as well without sudo (as
soon as I had told Ubuntu not to use sudo as well). What's your
distribution?
Thierry
I'm using Devuan (armhf). sudo and sudo-trinity don't seem to 'hold'.
Need to do some more digging I guess. It might be my system (Toshiba
AC100) which has had some troubles of late.
Can you not just open a root console?
michael@local [~]# su -
Password:
root@local [~]#
Or maybe I'm just missing what you're trying to achieve?
Probably :)
I'm trying to install TDE on a Toshiba AC100 (that I had a few OS
problems with) but I don't want sudo on the system. However, having
managed to get sudo 'held' back, I now get;
The following packages have unmet dependencies:
tde-core-trinity : Depends: sudo-trinity but it is not going to be
installed
The following actions will resolve these dependencies:
Install the following packages:
1) sudo-ldap [1.8.27-1+deb10u2 (testing)]
2) sudo-trinity [4:14.0.7-0debian10.0.0+0 (<NULL>)]
Any devs care to comment before I go to the trouble of repackaging?
Hi,
that explains why I didn't notice the problem with removing sudo on my
machine - I usually don't use meta-packages.
I suppose there should be no problem to move sudo-trinity from Depends to
Recommends. Likewise, synaptic-trinity could be moved. Does anyone think
there are reasons not to do so?
Cheers
--
Slávek