X-Git-Url: https://www.chiark.greenend.org.uk/ucgi/~ianmdlvl/git?p=dgit.git;a=blobdiff_plain;f=dgit-user.7.pod;h=18f06dac6e9a83e5d425875442f80af2ba974868;hp=c74396a56954d2ff176c2032cb022b1d71447921;hb=HEAD;hpb=b0f8410e806cdd326a7ebb6654f6fb8a47bc739c diff --git a/dgit-user.7.pod b/dgit-user.7.pod index c74396a5..18f06dac 100644 --- a/dgit-user.7.pod +++ b/dgit-user.7.pod @@ -97,8 +97,8 @@ you can look it up with dpkg: (In this example, libc6 is a "multi-arch: allowed" package, - which means that it exists in several different builds - for different architectures. +which means that it exists in several different builds +for different architectures. That's where C<:i386> comes from.) =head2 Finding the Debian release (the "suite") @@ -367,8 +367,9 @@ have enabled. You'll need a chroot for each of the secondary architectures. This is somewhat tiresome, even though Debian has excellent tools for managing chroots. -C from the sbuild package is a -good starting point. +C from the package of the same name +and C from the C package are +good starting points. Otherwise you could deinstall the packages of interest for those other architectures @@ -378,7 +379,7 @@ If neither of those are an option, your desperate last resort is to try using the same version number as the official package for your own package. -(The version is controlled by C - see above). +(The version is controlled by C - see above.) This is not ideal because it makes it hard to tell what is installed, and because it will mislead and confuse apt.