On a quirk, I just tried a YAST update and there was one for “zypper” but
Flag: nothing provides libsolv-tools=0.6.6 needed by libzypp-14.29.4-1.1.1.6.1.x86_64
13.2RC1 came with libsolv-tools=0.6.5 and libzypp-14.29.4-1.1.
So probably your mirror is syncing to 13.2 GM at the moment?
I would not install it until it’s fixed.
And you shouldn’t.
This might break zypper and YaST…
Be patient until the complete 13.2 is available.
PS: That libzypp seems to come from the 13.2 update repo. Anyway, you shouldn’t install it as long as there are dependency errors.
When the 13.2 GM is in the repo, this issue should be fixed. 13.2 has libsolv-tools-0.6.6.
I booted my RC1 system this morning, expecting to see many updates. They weren’t there. There appeared to be just this bad libzypp update and a kernel update.
Given that today was the date for the GM, I think that means that the final version of 13.2 is not much different from RC1.
I was wondering if that would happen. Looking at OpenQA over the last few days, I saw lots of 13.2 testing and lots of failures. So maybe they took the safest fallback position.
In the meantime, OpenQA now shows factor 20141029 tests, and those that have completed mostly look good. So perhaps there will be a factory update soon after a 3 week lag.
Yes, there’s still RC1 in the main repo. The packages are still dated Oct 7th and there is no 13.2 repo yet (only factory-snapshot).
And that libzypp update is not really “bad”, it’s just built against 13.2 GM already, which is not published yet.
There are just a few test updates in the update repo.
Given that today was the date for the GM, I think that means that the final version of 13.2 is not much different from RC1.
Of course it is:
newer kernel, libsolv-tools-0.6.6 instead of 0.6.5 ;), KDE 4.12.2 instead of 4.12.1, and a lot of other bug fixes here and there which I cannot list here all of course.
I was wondering if that would happen. Looking at OpenQA over the last few days, I saw lots of 13.2 testing and lots of failures. So maybe they took the safest fallback position.