On Mon, 2014-02-03 at 08:09 +0100, Patrick Ohly wrote:
On Mon, 2014-02-03 at 00:35 +0100, Emiliano Heyns wrote:
> OK, I just saw 1.3.99.7 roll in (yay!), but when I try to install
> activesyncd and syncevolution-activesync I get:
>
>
> sudo aptitude install activesyncd syncevolution-activesync
> The following NEW packages will be installed:
> activesyncd{b} syncevolution-activesync
> 0 packages upgraded, 2 newly installed, 0 to remove and 8 not
> upgraded.
> Need to get 2,120 kB of archives. After unpacking 8,962 kB will be
> used.
> The following packages have unmet dependencies:
> activesyncd : Depends: libebook-1.2-13 which is a virtual package.
> Depends: libical0 which is a virtual package.
activesyncd has hard dependencies on specific EDS versions, in this case
EDS < 3.6. I wasn't planning to change that. What I fixed was the
installation of SyncEvolution itself, for non-ActiveSync usage.
I guess I could try to compile activesyncd multiple times, on different
platforms.
SyncEvolution 1.4 will have activesyncd-wheezy/saucy/trusty and
syncevolution-activesync-wheezy/saucy/trusty .deb/.rpm/.tar.gz. In
addition, the apt repo also has meta activesyncd and
syncevolution-activesync packages which causes "apt-get install
activesyncd syncevolution-activesync" to pull in a suitable real
package.
--
Best Regards, Patrick Ohly
The content of this message is my personal opinion only and although
I am an employee of Intel, the statements I make here in no way
represent Intel's position on the issue, nor am I authorized to speak
on behalf of Intel on this matter.