On Thu 15 Nov, Richard Atterer wrote: > Hello, > Jigsaw Download 0.6.0 has been released. jigdo is the proposed > replacement for the pseudo image kit.
> jigdo-lite is contained in the jigdo-file_0.6.0 package on my > homepage. Install that .deb, run jigdo-lite, then follow the > instructions. The .jigdo files that the program asks for are located > at <http://cdimage.debian.org/~atterer/jigdo/>. > Note that you can use jigdo-lite to "upgrade", say, from a 2.2r3 CD > image to a 2.2r4 CD image. > Please give me feedback about any success or failure! OK. I tried it. (as I need to upgrade my 2.2r3 images to 2.2r4). Apt-getting debs worked OK and installed ok (on an x86 'testing' box). It all seems to work fine - just a few 'user experience' issues for jigdo-lite. It's be nice for it to ask all the questions at the beginning (or at least only after the jidgo file) so I don't have to wait whilst it downloads the template file and _then_ tell it where my locally-mounted set of files is, then do all of those and, then ask where the server to use is. I can see that some of the questions depend on previous status, but a bit of pre-asking would be good. Also during the downloading of files from my locally-mounted file source the path was quite long and all the filenames wrapped to the next line and then got covered by the progress-counter which looks messy. Best solution here would be to show the start of the path and the full leafname but not the bit in the middle if its going to wrap. And backspace didn't work when entering URLS etc (it's a normal linux text-mode 25x80 virtual terminal) (fortunately delete did). They work at a normal prompt. Apart from that it all seems to work nicely. (I'll find out in a few hours time when it's collected the remaining 300-odd files that weren't on the 2.2r3 CD or in my local archive) For my purposes PIK is useful because it generates a list of files that are missing so I can tell ncftp to get them all and put them in my archive then run PIK again. This ensures my local archive is uptodate wrt current CDs. So far as I can see jigdo doesn't generate such a list of missing files, so whilst it will make nice CD images it doesn't help keep the archive updated. (yes I know there are other tools to do this but I've had limited sucess getting them to download the parts I want but not the parts I don't!). It was all OK before this pools lark - now everything has got rather complicated. I need to have another go at getting Otto's scripts to do what I want... Wookey -- Aleph One Ltd, Bottisham, CAMBRIDGE, CB5 9BA, UK Tel +44 (0) 1223 811679 work: http://www.aleph1.co.uk/ play: http://www.chaos.org.uk/~wookey/ -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]