On Sep 2, 2012, at 22:04 PM, William Harrington wrote:
Or use the host used to build the final system and use this
wget.pl with the LWP installed on the host: which means the host
system requirements would need perl with LWP:
Actually the host wouldn't need WLP, the user would need to
On Sep 3, 2012, at 09:45 AM, William Harrington wrote:
On Sep 2, 2012, at 22:04 PM, William Harrington wrote:
Or use the host used to build the final system and use this
wget.pl with the LWP installed on the host: which means the host
system requirements would need perl with LWP:
On Sep 2, 2012, at 22:04 PM, William Harrington wrote:
use gnu awk:
BEGIN {
NetService = /inet/tcp/0/mirror.anl.gov/80
print GET /pub/gnu/wget/wget-1.14.tar.xz | NetService
while ((NetService | getline) 0)
print $0
close(NetService)
}
Then run gawk -f http.gawk binaryfilename
On 09/03/2012 03:04 PM, William Harrington wrote:
On Sep 2, 2012, at 05:00 AM, Martin Ward wrote:
On 02/09/12 03:47, William Harrington wrote:
Greetings All,
An issue we need to discuss.
In the final system we do not have an ftp client (which can be used
to ftp to a server to get curl
Hello,
On Sep 2, 2012, at 22:36 PM, Bryan Baldwin wrote:
I've had some issues with wget in downloading packages from sites like
SourceForge, who do not link directly to the file. Curl works on
these,
however.
Right. well I've been working on a page, rather than putting a
download
Greetings All,
An issue we need to discuss.
In the final system we do not have an ftp client (which can be used
to ftp to a server to get curl or wget or whatever other utility to
download packages for cblfs).
We can do two things here:
get rid of iputils and install inetutils, which we