have you go in testing and then try to go back in stable ?
no need to rush , just wait return confirm for mirrors update
You are using pacman and opting to not pass the downgrade flag.
sudo pacman -Syuu
The extra u allows for downgrading to match the mirror.
[Note for some: pacman
and pamac
are not the same.]
Does it mean I do have to downgrade by
???
Did the newer manjaro-hello version came by the pamac command? which I did use some days ago for an AUR package update.
if you type pacman -Syu or -Syyu , you have an upgrade
if you type pacman -Syuu you get a downgrade
if you type pacman -Syyuu you get a full synchronize with mirrors ( including revert )
Isnāt the right side the installed version, and the left the version the mirrors are offering? Otherwise there would be no downgrade warning for manjaro-hello
. See the bottom of the list in the opening post.
You dont have to if you dont notice any problems.
But if you want to be in-lign with the mirrors ā¦ add an extra u.
Notice the second section under -u
in the manual page for pacmanā¦
man pacman
...
-u, --sysupgrade
Upgrades all packages that are out-of-date. Each
currently-installed package will be examined and upgraded if a
newer package exists. A report of all packages to upgrade will be
presented, and the operation will not proceed without user
confirmation. Dependencies are automatically resolved at this level
and will be installed/upgraded if necessary.
Pass this option twice to enable package downgrades; in this case,
pacman will select sync packages whose versions do not match with
the local versions. This can be useful when the user switches from
a testing repository to a stable one.
...
Thank you,
but I still do not understand by which action my manjaro-hello version (0.7.0-6) came from.
I never switched branches, always on stable.
It was pushed to stable, but reverted. Not your fault.
OK, now I got it.
So everyone has to downgrade it.
Thank you.
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