Ii dbus 1.12.16-1 devuan2 amd64 simple interprocess messaging system (daemon and utilities) Ii colord-data 1.4.3-3 devuan1 all system service to manage device colour profiles - data files Ii colord 1.4.3-3 devuan1 amd64 system service to manage device colour profiles - system daemon Ii bsdutils 1:2.32.1-0.1 devuan2.1 amd64 basic utilities from 4.4BSD-Lite Ii base-files 10.3 devuan3.0 all Devuan base system miscellaneous files But It is for instance, trivial to download that missing library /lib/i386-linux-gnu/libuuid.so.1.3.0 and "install" it dpkg -l | grep -E -e '\ devuan' I suppose, it might affect the audio (since this library is pulled in due to pulse0), so it might need additional hands-on later. In this case you would fool your system with an "equivs" installation of libuuid1:i386=2.33.1-0.1 devuan1, and that might be sufficient to get all else installed. Perhaps you can bypass this by using equivs, and (learning to) use it it's a fairly simple way to tell your system that you have a package of a particular version installed without actually having it installed. Thus, you don't ever want to install libuuid1. I haven't looked into the details, but that "Replaces" directive seems totally misplaced, since libuuid1 only provides a single library, whereas e2fsprogs provides more than a few useful and essential things, but not that library, nor (as far as I can see at a glance) anything conflicting with that library. It seems like libuuid1 has an explicit "Replaces: e2fsprogs" declaration, which causes great havoc in the base set up.
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December 2022
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