Re: downloading ALL Packages of a fedora release.

2018-02-22 Thread JD



On 01/14/2018 02:22 PM, Ed Greshko wrote:

On 01/15/18 05:19, Ed Greshko wrote:

kernel-devel  x86_64 4.14.13-300.fc27 updates12 
M
  kernel-headersx86_64 4.14.13-300.fc27 updates   
1.2 M


Note these packages are from updates.  If the laptop system hasn't been updated 
one
can use

dnf --disablerepo updates --downloadonly --downloaddir=/tmp install broadcom-wl

to get

  kernel-devel  x86_64 4.13.9-300.fc27  fedora 
11 M
  kernel-headersx86_64 4.13.9-300.fc27  fedora
1.2 M
After all this time, I was able to return to my friend's laptop and I 
was ready

with all the rpms outlined by Ed.

They all installed, albeit, with the command option --disablerepo=*
They all installed, (from external disk), and I rebooted.
Network came up. I thought I was out of the woods and into
a well mapped world.
I did the update, and all the packages updated.
No problems. I did a clean shutdown.
That was yesterday.
Today, I powered up the machine, and it proceeded to do fsck
But I had done a clean install and a clcean shutdown!!!
After fsck, I rebooted.
AGAIN - machines started to do fsck.
I waited, did another clean shutdown.
AGAIN the machine ran fsck
How in tarnation can I put an end to this?
I had not experienced this on other machines running older
versions of fedora.
OK... that was the first problem today,
Problem 2:
Network will not come up :( :( :(
I checked to make sure all the rpm packages that brought up the network 
were still there.

And indeed they are.
Yet the network will not come up :(
I have to admit that I had not set up a proper firewall yesterday.
The machine's firewall was still in it's "first install state" and I 
assume in a "promiscuous" configuration.
I do not know, I am only guessing what could have happened and by what 
cause!!!


So, how do I proceed now?
Should I re-install the rpms that first brought up the machine's wifi?
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Re: downloading ALL Packages of a fedora release.

2018-01-26 Thread JD
It's quite alright.
At any rate, the fedora release packages would not have helped a lot,
because the crucial packages had to come from rpmfusion in order
to enable the functioning of the broadcom 4322 chipset.
Cheers,
JD

On Fri, Jan 26, 2018 at 2:18 AM, Terry Polzin  wrote:

>
>
> On Thu, Jan 25, 2018 at 8:30 PM, JD  wrote:
>
>>
>>
>> On 01/25/2018 07:14 AM, Terry Polzin wrote:
>>
>>>
>>>
>>> On Thu, Jan 25, 2018 at 8:38 AM, Terry Polzin >> > wrote:
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> On Wed, Jan 24, 2018 at 8:35 PM, JD >> > wrote:
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> On 01/14/2018 02:22 PM, Ed Greshko wrote:
>>>
>>> On 01/15/18 05:19, Ed Greshko wrote:
>>>
>>> kernel-devel  x86_64 4.14.13-300.fc27
>>> updates 12 M
>>>   kernel-headersx86_64 4.14.13-300.fc27
>>>   updates1.2 M
>>>
>>>
>>> Note these packages are from updates.  If the laptop
>>> system hasn't been updated one
>>> can use
>>>
>>> dnf --disablerepo updates --downloadonly
>>> --downloaddir=/tmp install broadcom-wl
>>>
>>> to get
>>>
>>>   kernel-devel  x86_64 4.13.9-300.fc27  fedora
>>>  11 M
>>>   kernel-headersx86_64 4.13.9-300.fc27  fedora
>>> 1.2 M
>>>
>>> All done and installed and all is well on my friend's f27 laptop.
>>> The snag I ran into had to do with the fact that the un-networked
>>> laptop, while trying to install the broadcom rpm and the
>>> dependencies,
>>> kept throwing me a curve: dnf kep saying it was unable to sync
>>> with the
>>> repositories: updates, fedora, rpmfusion
>>>
>>> How could it, since I was trying to install the very things
>>> that WOULD
>>> enable it to sync.
>>> So, before I gave up, I added the command argument:
>>> --disablerepo=*
>>> and lo and behold all the rpms in question got installed, and
>>> I rebooted,
>>> and the network was on. Ran updates. All is well.
>>>
>>> Thanx a lot!!
>>>
>>> ___
>>> users mailing list -- users@lists.fedoraproject.org
>>> 
>>> To unsubscribe send an email to
>>> users-le...@lists.fedoraproject.org
>>> 
>>>
>>>
>>> JD
>>>
>>> I don't believe that the workstation ISO will have what you need,
>>> as it is a netinstall image.
>>> You will probably want the server image,  I'm downloading that to
>>> check it now.
>>>
>>>
>>> JD
>>>
>>> The server iso has what you need,
>>>
>>> Yes you are right, but it is too late now :)
>>
>> I should have looked there myself :)
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>>
>
> Sorry for the delay JD got busy at the office  -Terry
>
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>
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Re: downloading ALL Packages of a fedora release.

2018-01-25 Thread Terry Polzin
On Thu, Jan 25, 2018 at 8:30 PM, JD  wrote:

>
>
> On 01/25/2018 07:14 AM, Terry Polzin wrote:
>
>>
>>
>> On Thu, Jan 25, 2018 at 8:38 AM, Terry Polzin > > wrote:
>>
>>
>>
>> On Wed, Jan 24, 2018 at 8:35 PM, JD > > wrote:
>>
>>
>>
>> On 01/14/2018 02:22 PM, Ed Greshko wrote:
>>
>> On 01/15/18 05:19, Ed Greshko wrote:
>>
>> kernel-devel  x86_64 4.14.13-300.fc27
>> updates 12 M
>>   kernel-headersx86_64 4.14.13-300.fc27
>>   updates1.2 M
>>
>>
>> Note these packages are from updates.  If the laptop
>> system hasn't been updated one
>> can use
>>
>> dnf --disablerepo updates --downloadonly
>> --downloaddir=/tmp install broadcom-wl
>>
>> to get
>>
>>   kernel-devel  x86_64 4.13.9-300.fc27  fedora
>>  11 M
>>   kernel-headersx86_64 4.13.9-300.fc27  fedora
>> 1.2 M
>>
>> All done and installed and all is well on my friend's f27 laptop.
>> The snag I ran into had to do with the fact that the un-networked
>> laptop, while trying to install the broadcom rpm and the
>> dependencies,
>> kept throwing me a curve: dnf kep saying it was unable to sync
>> with the
>> repositories: updates, fedora, rpmfusion
>>
>> How could it, since I was trying to install the very things
>> that WOULD
>> enable it to sync.
>> So, before I gave up, I added the command argument:
>> --disablerepo=*
>> and lo and behold all the rpms in question got installed, and
>> I rebooted,
>> and the network was on. Ran updates. All is well.
>>
>> Thanx a lot!!
>>
>> ___
>> users mailing list -- users@lists.fedoraproject.org
>> 
>> To unsubscribe send an email to
>> users-le...@lists.fedoraproject.org
>> 
>>
>>
>> JD
>>
>> I don't believe that the workstation ISO will have what you need,
>> as it is a netinstall image.
>> You will probably want the server image,  I'm downloading that to
>> check it now.
>>
>>
>> JD
>>
>> The server iso has what you need,
>>
>> Yes you are right, but it is too late now :)
>
> I should have looked there myself :)
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>

Sorry for the delay JD got busy at the office  -Terry
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Re: downloading ALL Packages of a fedora release.

2018-01-25 Thread JD



On 01/25/2018 07:14 AM, Terry Polzin wrote:



On Thu, Jan 25, 2018 at 8:38 AM, Terry Polzin > wrote:




On Wed, Jan 24, 2018 at 8:35 PM, JD > wrote:



On 01/14/2018 02:22 PM, Ed Greshko wrote:

On 01/15/18 05:19, Ed Greshko wrote:

kernel-devel  x86_64 4.14.13-300.fc27   
 updates 12 M
  kernel-headersx86_64 4.14.13-300.fc27   
 updates1.2 M



Note these packages are from updates.  If the laptop
system hasn't been updated one
can use

dnf --disablerepo updates --downloadonly
--downloaddir=/tmp install broadcom-wl

to get

  kernel-devel  x86_64 4.13.9-300.fc27  fedora
 11 M
  kernel-headersx86_64 4.13.9-300.fc27  fedora
1.2 M

All done and installed and all is well on my friend's f27 laptop.
The snag I ran into had to do with the fact that the un-networked
laptop, while trying to install the broadcom rpm and the
dependencies,
kept throwing me a curve: dnf kep saying it was unable to sync
with the
repositories: updates, fedora, rpmfusion

How could it, since I was trying to install the very things
that WOULD
enable it to sync.
So, before I gave up, I added the command argument:
--disablerepo=*
and lo and behold all the rpms in question got installed, and
I rebooted,
and the network was on. Ran updates. All is well.

Thanx a lot!!

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JD

I don't believe that the workstation ISO will have what you need,
as it is a netinstall image.
You will probably want the server image,  I'm downloading that to
check it now.


JD

The server iso has what you need,


Yes you are right, but it is too late now :)

I should have looked there myself :)
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Re: downloading ALL Packages of a fedora release.

2018-01-25 Thread Terry Polzin
On Thu, Jan 25, 2018 at 8:38 AM, Terry Polzin  wrote:

>
>
> On Wed, Jan 24, 2018 at 8:35 PM, JD  wrote:
>
>>
>>
>> On 01/14/2018 02:22 PM, Ed Greshko wrote:
>>
>>> On 01/15/18 05:19, Ed Greshko wrote:
>>>
 kernel-devel  x86_64 4.14.13-300.fc27 updates
   12 M
   kernel-headersx86_64 4.14.13-300.fc27 updates
1.2 M

>>>
>>> Note these packages are from updates.  If the laptop system hasn't been
>>> updated one
>>> can use
>>>
>>> dnf --disablerepo updates --downloadonly --downloaddir=/tmp install
>>> broadcom-wl
>>>
>>> to get
>>>
>>>   kernel-devel  x86_64 4.13.9-300.fc27  fedora
>>>11 M
>>>   kernel-headersx86_64 4.13.9-300.fc27  fedora
>>>   1.2 M
>>>
>> All done and installed and all is well on my friend's f27 laptop.
>> The snag I ran into had to do with the fact that the un-networked
>> laptop, while trying to install the broadcom rpm and the dependencies,
>> kept throwing me a curve: dnf kep saying it was unable to sync with the
>> repositories: updates, fedora, rpmfusion
>>
>> How could it, since I was trying to install the very things that WOULD
>> enable it to sync.
>> So, before I gave up, I added the command argument:
>> --disablerepo=*
>> and lo and behold all the rpms in question got installed, and I rebooted,
>> and the network was on. Ran updates. All is well.
>>
>> Thanx a lot!!
>>
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>>
>
> JD
>
> I don't believe that the workstation ISO will have what you need, as it is
> a netinstall image.
> You will probably want the server image,  I'm downloading that to check it
> now.
>

JD

The server iso has what you need,
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Re: downloading ALL Packages of a fedora release.

2018-01-25 Thread Terry Polzin
On Wed, Jan 24, 2018 at 8:35 PM, JD  wrote:

>
>
> On 01/14/2018 02:22 PM, Ed Greshko wrote:
>
>> On 01/15/18 05:19, Ed Greshko wrote:
>>
>>> kernel-devel  x86_64 4.14.13-300.fc27 updates
>>> 12 M
>>>   kernel-headersx86_64 4.14.13-300.fc27 updates
>>>  1.2 M
>>>
>>
>> Note these packages are from updates.  If the laptop system hasn't been
>> updated one
>> can use
>>
>> dnf --disablerepo updates --downloadonly --downloaddir=/tmp install
>> broadcom-wl
>>
>> to get
>>
>>   kernel-devel  x86_64 4.13.9-300.fc27  fedora
>>  11 M
>>   kernel-headersx86_64 4.13.9-300.fc27  fedora
>> 1.2 M
>>
> All done and installed and all is well on my friend's f27 laptop.
> The snag I ran into had to do with the fact that the un-networked
> laptop, while trying to install the broadcom rpm and the dependencies,
> kept throwing me a curve: dnf kep saying it was unable to sync with the
> repositories: updates, fedora, rpmfusion
>
> How could it, since I was trying to install the very things that WOULD
> enable it to sync.
> So, before I gave up, I added the command argument:
> --disablerepo=*
> and lo and behold all the rpms in question got installed, and I rebooted,
> and the network was on. Ran updates. All is well.
>
> Thanx a lot!!
>
> ___
> users mailing list -- users@lists.fedoraproject.org
> To unsubscribe send an email to users-le...@lists.fedoraproject.org
>

JD

I don't believe that the workstation ISO will have what you need, as it is
a netinstall image.
You will probably want the server image,  I'm downloading that to check it
now.
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Re: downloading ALL Packages of a fedora release.

2018-01-24 Thread JD



On 01/14/2018 02:22 PM, Ed Greshko wrote:

On 01/15/18 05:19, Ed Greshko wrote:

kernel-devel  x86_64 4.14.13-300.fc27 updates12 
M
  kernel-headersx86_64 4.14.13-300.fc27 updates   
1.2 M


Note these packages are from updates.  If the laptop system hasn't been updated 
one
can use

dnf --disablerepo updates --downloadonly --downloaddir=/tmp install broadcom-wl

to get

  kernel-devel  x86_64 4.13.9-300.fc27  fedora 
11 M
  kernel-headersx86_64 4.13.9-300.fc27  fedora
1.2 M

All done and installed and all is well on my friend's f27 laptop.
The snag I ran into had to do with the fact that the un-networked
laptop, while trying to install the broadcom rpm and the dependencies,
kept throwing me a curve: dnf kep saying it was unable to sync with the
repositories: updates, fedora, rpmfusion

How could it, since I was trying to install the very things that WOULD
enable it to sync.
So, before I gave up, I added the command argument:
--disablerepo=*
and lo and behold all the rpms in question got installed, and I rebooted,
and the network was on. Ran updates. All is well.

Thanx a lot!!
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Re: downloading ALL Packages of a fedora release.

2018-01-23 Thread Ed Greshko
On 01/23/18 10:57, JD wrote:
> Downloaded the rpms you had listed in your email. 


Rule #671.5

Never use a list generated by another person, even if that list is correct. 
Especially, do not willy-nilly add or remove entries from the other list and 
use it.

Generate your own list using the commands the other person used.  Your system 
may be
different from that of the other person and may generate a different result.

Oh, and another reason for following the rule?  The contents of a repo may have
changed since the time the other person generated it.

In other words, always do the *work* yourself.

-- 
A motto of mine is: When in doubt, try it out



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Re: downloading ALL Packages of a fedora release.

2018-01-23 Thread Ed Greshko
On 01/23/18 10:57, JD wrote:
> Downloaded the rpms you had listed in your email. 


Rule #671.5

Never use a list generated by another person, even if that list is correct. 
Especially, do not willy-nilly add or remove entries from the other list and 
use it.

Generate your own list using the commands the other person used.  Your system 
may be
different from that of the other person and may generate a different result. 

-- 
A motto of mine is: When in doubt, try it out




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Re: downloading ALL Packages of a fedora release.

2018-01-23 Thread Ed Greshko
On 01/24/18 05:24, JD wrote:
> Terry,
> have you looked inside F27 workstation install iso?
> Please take a look, and tell me if the release packages
> are ALL there.

Packages such as "kernel-devel" and "kernel-headers" are not on the LiveOS ISO.


>
> On Mon, Jan 22, 2018 at 7:21 PM, Terry Polzin  > wrote:
>
> Can't you mount an install iso and use it as a local repo?
>
> On Mon, Jan 22, 2018 at 2:14 PM, JD  > wrote:
>
>
>
> On 01/14/2018 02:22 PM, Ed Greshko wrote:
>
> On 01/15/18 05:19, Ed Greshko wrote:
>
> kernel-devel          x86_64 4.14.13-300.fc27     updates     
>     
>           12 M
>   kernel-headers        x86_64 4.14.13-300.fc27     updates   
>     
>            1.2 M
>
>
> Note these packages are from updates.  If the laptop system 
> hasn't been
> updated one
> can use
>
> dnf --disablerepo updates --downloadonly --downloaddir=/tmp 
> install
> broadcom-wl
>
> to get
>
>   kernel-devel          x86_64 4.13.9-300.fc27      fedora        
>      
>        11 M
>   kernel-headers        x86_64 4.13.9-300.fc27      fedora        
>      
>       1.2 M
>
> When doing the --downloadonly,
> how do I disable the dependencies, since they are NOT crucial to 
> networking the
> fc27 machine?
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>
>
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>
>
>
>
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-- 
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Re: downloading ALL Packages of a fedora release.

2018-01-23 Thread Ed Greshko
On 01/24/18 04:55, JD wrote:
>
>
> On 01/22/2018 03:01 PM, Ed Greshko wrote:
>> On 01/23/18 03:14, JD wrote:
>>>
>>> On 01/14/2018 02:22 PM, Ed Greshko wrote:
 On 01/15/18 05:19, Ed Greshko wrote:
> kernel-devel  x86_64 4.14.13-300.fc27 updates 
>    12 M
>    kernel-headers    x86_64 4.14.13-300.fc27 updates  
> 
> 1.2 M
 Note these packages are from updates.  If the laptop system hasn't been 
 updated one
 can use

 dnf --disablerepo updates --downloadonly --downloaddir=/tmp install 
 broadcom-wl

 to get

    kernel-devel  x86_64 4.13.9-300.fc27  fedora
 
 11 M
    kernel-headers    x86_64 4.13.9-300.fc27  fedora
    
 1.2 M

>>> When doing the --downloadonly,
>>> how do I disable the dependencies, since they are NOT crucial to networking 
>>> the
>>> fc27 machine?
>> I do not understand why you throw up artificial barriers to progress.  
>> You're going
>> to be downloading things to a flash drive and walk it over to the other 
>> system.  So
>> it isn't as if you're going to be short on space.  Besides, "dependencies" 
>> are a
>> dependency for a reason.  If you ignore those and then try to install 
>> packages whose
>> dependency you've ignored you are bound to run in to problems.
>>
>> You spend more time raising irrelevant issues and then waiting for 
>> responses.  Unless
>> you are working on more than one machine, we know you now have one Wifi, the 
>> internal
>> one, adapter being recognized by the system with the driver loaded.
>>
>> wlp0s29f7u3: flags=4099  mtu 1500
>>  ether c0:25:e9:24:89:4b  txqueuelen 1000  (Ethernet)
>>  RX packets 0  bytes 0 (0.0 B)
>>  RX errors 0  dropped 0  overruns 0  frame 0
>>  TX packets 0  bytes 0 (0.0 B)
>>  TX errors 0  dropped 0 overruns 0  carrier 0  collisions 0
>>
>> You're just having problems with authentication to a router in a Starbucks.  
>> I've
>> already made one suggestion which you've not followed up on.  So, how about 
>> another?
>> Take the machine to a different Wifi Router to where you have access and 
>> control
>> over it.
> Here is the output of the attempt to install:
>
>
> 
>  Package Arch   Version Repository    Size
> 
> Installing:
>  elfutils-libelf-devel x86_64 0.170-1.fc27 @commandline  
> 46 k
>  fakeroot    x86_64 1.22-1.fc27 @commandline 102 k
>  redhat-rpm-config   noarch 67-1.fc27 @commandline  61 k
>  rpm-build   x86_64 4.14.0-2.fc27 @commandline 160 k
>  rpmdevtools noarch 8.10-3.fc27 @commandline 105 k
> Skipping packages with conflicts:
> (add '--best --allowerasing' to command line to force their upgrade):
>  akmod-wl    x86_64 6.30.223.271-14.fc27 @commandline 5.5 M
>  akmod-wl    x86_64 6.30.223.271-15.fc27 @commandline 5.5 M
> Skipping packages with broken dependencies:
>  akmods  noarch 0.5.6-10.fc27 @commandline  23 k
>  broadcom-wl noarch 6.30.223.271-3.fc27 @commandline  24 k
>  gcc x86_64 7.2.1-2.fc27 @commandline  21 M
>  glibc-devel x86_64 2.26-15.fc27 @commandline 985 k
>  glibc-headers   x86_64 2.26-15.fc27 @commandline 500 k
>  kmod-wl x86_64 6.30.223.271-15.fc27 @commandline  23 k
>
> Transaction Summary
> 
> Install   5 Packages
> Skip  8 Packages
>
> to see the complete output of dnf, see
> https://www.sendspace.com/file/pqs7nc
>
> Clearly I am doing something wrong, or I am simply having trouble
> with dependencies.
>

I am sorry for not checking your work before you continued.

For starters, if you look at the list I generated on 1/15 you'd see there is a 
single
occurrence of  akmod-wl  and you've listed 2.  That same list I gave on 1/15 
does not
contain kmod-wl while yours does. 

You really need to pay attention to what you're doing.  The best thing you can 
do is
follow precise instructions  Those instructions are in another email of 1/5 
and
are...

On a system with a functional internet connection you can find out what 
packages are
needed to install the broadcom-wl package from RPMfusion in one of 2 ways.

Way One

1.  In a Virtual Machine boot the Live-OS of the spin installed on the laptop.
2.  Install the RPMfusion repos to the Live-OS.
3.  Issue the command   dnf --downloadonly --downloaddir=/tmp install 
broadcom-wl
4.  Transfer the downloaded rpm file to external media
5.  Make sure that "kernel" packages downloaded match the kernel version on the
laptop and if not download those from koji.

Way Two

1.  Do the exact same as above but after installing 

Re: downloading ALL Packages of a fedora release.

2018-01-23 Thread JD
Terry,
have you looked inside F27 workstation install iso?
Please take a look, and tell me if the release packages
are ALL there.

On Mon, Jan 22, 2018 at 7:21 PM, Terry Polzin  wrote:

> Can't you mount an install iso and use it as a local repo?
>
> On Mon, Jan 22, 2018 at 2:14 PM, JD  wrote:
>
>>
>>
>> On 01/14/2018 02:22 PM, Ed Greshko wrote:
>>
>>> On 01/15/18 05:19, Ed Greshko wrote:
>>>
 kernel-devel  x86_64 4.14.13-300.fc27 updates
   12 M
   kernel-headersx86_64 4.14.13-300.fc27 updates
1.2 M

>>>
>>> Note these packages are from updates.  If the laptop system hasn't been
>>> updated one
>>> can use
>>>
>>> dnf --disablerepo updates --downloadonly --downloaddir=/tmp install
>>> broadcom-wl
>>>
>>> to get
>>>
>>>   kernel-devel  x86_64 4.13.9-300.fc27  fedora
>>>11 M
>>>   kernel-headersx86_64 4.13.9-300.fc27  fedora
>>>   1.2 M
>>>
>>> When doing the --downloadonly,
>> how do I disable the dependencies, since they are NOT crucial to
>> networking the
>> fc27 machine?
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Re: downloading ALL Packages of a fedora release.

2018-01-23 Thread JD



On 01/22/2018 03:01 PM, Ed Greshko wrote:

On 01/23/18 03:14, JD wrote:


On 01/14/2018 02:22 PM, Ed Greshko wrote:

On 01/15/18 05:19, Ed Greshko wrote:

kernel-devel  x86_64 4.14.13-300.fc27 updates12 
M
   kernel-headersx86_64 4.14.13-300.fc27 updates   
1.2 M

Note these packages are from updates.  If the laptop system hasn't been updated 
one
can use

dnf --disablerepo updates --downloadonly --downloaddir=/tmp install broadcom-wl

to get

   kernel-devel  x86_64 4.13.9-300.fc27  fedora 
11 M
   kernel-headersx86_64 4.13.9-300.fc27  fedora
1.2 M


When doing the --downloadonly,
how do I disable the dependencies, since they are NOT crucial to networking the
fc27 machine?

I do not understand why you throw up artificial barriers to progress.  You're 
going
to be downloading things to a flash drive and walk it over to the other system. 
 So
it isn't as if you're going to be short on space.  Besides, "dependencies" are a
dependency for a reason.  If you ignore those and then try to install packages 
whose
dependency you've ignored you are bound to run in to problems.

You spend more time raising irrelevant issues and then waiting for responses.  
Unless
you are working on more than one machine, we know you now have one Wifi, the 
internal
one, adapter being recognized by the system with the driver loaded.

wlp0s29f7u3: flags=4099  mtu 1500
 ether c0:25:e9:24:89:4b  txqueuelen 1000  (Ethernet)
 RX packets 0  bytes 0 (0.0 B)
 RX errors 0  dropped 0  overruns 0  frame 0
 TX packets 0  bytes 0 (0.0 B)
 TX errors 0  dropped 0 overruns 0  carrier 0  collisions 0

You're just having problems with authentication to a router in a Starbucks.  
I've
already made one suggestion which you've not followed up on.  So, how about 
another?
Take the machine to a different Wifi Router to where you have access and 
control over it.

Here is the output of the attempt to install:



 Package Arch   Version RepositorySize

Installing:
 elfutils-libelf-devel x86_64 0.170-1.fc27 
@commandline  46 k

 fakerootx86_64 1.22-1.fc27 @commandline 102 k
 redhat-rpm-config   noarch 67-1.fc27 @commandline  61 k
 rpm-build   x86_64 4.14.0-2.fc27 @commandline 160 k
 rpmdevtools noarch 8.10-3.fc27 @commandline 105 k
Skipping packages with conflicts:
(add '--best --allowerasing' to command line to force their upgrade):
 akmod-wlx86_64 6.30.223.271-14.fc27 @commandline 5.5 M
 akmod-wlx86_64 6.30.223.271-15.fc27 @commandline 5.5 M
Skipping packages with broken dependencies:
 akmods  noarch 0.5.6-10.fc27 @commandline  23 k
 broadcom-wl noarch 6.30.223.271-3.fc27 @commandline  24 k
 gcc x86_64 7.2.1-2.fc27 @commandline  21 M
 glibc-devel x86_64 2.26-15.fc27 @commandline 985 k
 glibc-headers   x86_64 2.26-15.fc27 @commandline 500 k
 kmod-wl x86_64 6.30.223.271-15.fc27 @commandline  23 k

Transaction Summary

Install   5 Packages
Skip  8 Packages

to see the complete output of dnf, see
https://www.sendspace.com/file/pqs7nc

Clearly I am doing something wrong, or I am simply having trouble
with dependencies.
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Re: downloading ALL Packages of a fedora release.

2018-01-22 Thread JD



On 01/22/2018 03:01 PM, Ed Greshko wrote:

On 01/23/18 03:14, JD wrote:


On 01/14/2018 02:22 PM, Ed Greshko wrote:

On 01/15/18 05:19, Ed Greshko wrote:

kernel-devel  x86_64 4.14.13-300.fc27 updates12 
M
   kernel-headersx86_64 4.14.13-300.fc27 updates   
1.2 M

Note these packages are from updates.  If the laptop system hasn't been updated 
one
can use

dnf --disablerepo updates --downloadonly --downloaddir=/tmp install broadcom-wl

to get

   kernel-devel  x86_64 4.13.9-300.fc27  fedora 
11 M
   kernel-headersx86_64 4.13.9-300.fc27  fedora
1.2 M


When doing the --downloadonly,
how do I disable the dependencies, since they are NOT crucial to networking the
fc27 machine?

I do not understand why you throw up artificial barriers to progress.  You're 
going
to be downloading things to a flash drive and walk it over to the other system. 
 So
it isn't as if you're going to be short on space.  Besides, "dependencies" are a
dependency for a reason.  If you ignore those and then try to install packages 
whose
dependency you've ignored you are bound to run in to problems.

You spend more time raising irrelevant issues and then waiting for responses.  
Unless
you are working on more than one machine, we know you now have one Wifi, the 
internal
one, adapter being recognized by the system with the driver loaded.

wlp0s29f7u3: flags=4099  mtu 1500
 ether c0:25:e9:24:89:4b  txqueuelen 1000  (Ethernet)
 RX packets 0  bytes 0 (0.0 B)
 RX errors 0  dropped 0  overruns 0  frame 0
 TX packets 0  bytes 0 (0.0 B)
 TX errors 0  dropped 0 overruns 0  carrier 0  collisions 0

You're just having problems with authentication to a router in a Starbucks.  
I've
already made one suggestion which you've not followed up on.  So, how about 
another?
Take the machine to a different Wifi Router to where you have access and 
control over it.

Downloaded the rpms you had listed in your email.
They are the following RPMS:
akmods-0.5.6-10.fc27.noarch.rpm
akmod-wl-6.30.223.271-14.fc27.x86_64.rpm
akmod-wl-6.30.223.271-15.fc27.x86_64.rpm
binutils-2.29-6.fc27.x86_64.rpm
broadcom-wl-6.30.223.271-3.fc27.noarch.rpm
cpp-7.2.1-2.fc27.x86_64.rpm
dwz-0.12-5.fc27.x86_64.rpm
elfutils-libelf-devel-0.170-1.fc27.x86_64.rpm
fakeroot-1.22-1.fc27.x86_64.rpm
fakeroot-libs-1.22-1.fc27.x86_64.rpm
fedora-rpm-macros-26-3.fc27.noarch.rpm
fpc-srpm-macros-1.1-3.fc27.noarch.rpm
gcc-7.2.1-2.fc27.x86_64.rpm
ghc-srpm-macros-1.4.2-6.fc27.noarch.rpm
glibc-devel-2.26-15.fc27.x86_64.rpm
glibc-headers-2.26-15.fc27.x86_64.rpm
gnat-srpm-macros-4-4.fc27.noarch.rpm
go-srpm-macros-2-10.fc27.noarch.rpm
isl-0.16.1-3.fc27.x86_64.rpm
kernel-devel-4.13.9-300.fc27.x86_64.rpm
kernel-headers-4.13.9-300.fc27.x86_64.rpm
kmodtool-1-25.fc27.noarch.rpm
kmod-wl-6.30.223.271-15.fc27.x86_64.rpm
ocaml-srpm-macros-5-2.fc27.noarch.rpm
openblas-srpm-macros-2-2.fc27.noarch.rpm
patch-2.7.5-6.fc27.x86_64.rpm
perl-srpm-macros-1-24.fc27.noarch.rpm
python-srpm-macros-3-22.fc27.noarch.rpm
qt5-srpm-macros-5.9.1-2.fc27.noarch.rpm
redhat-rpm-config-67-1.fc27.noarch.rpm
rpm-build-4.14.0-2.fc27.x86_64.rpm
rpmdevtools-8.10-3.fc27.noarch.rpm
rpmfusion-free-release-27.noarch.rpm
rpmfusion-nonfree-release-27.noarch.rpm
rust-srpm-macros-4-3.fc27.noarch.rpm
xemacs-filesystem-21.5.34-25.20170628hg97140cfdeca7.fc27.noarch.rpm
zlib-devel-1.2.11-4.fc27.x86_64.rpm
zstd-1.3.1-1.fc27.x86_64.rpm

Will install them in the f27 laptop as soon as I have access to it.

Will get back about it after then.
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Re: downloading ALL Packages of a fedora release.

2018-01-22 Thread Ed Greshko
On 01/23/18 03:14, JD wrote:
>
>
> On 01/14/2018 02:22 PM, Ed Greshko wrote:
>> On 01/15/18 05:19, Ed Greshko wrote:
>>> kernel-devel  x86_64 4.14.13-300.fc27 updates   
>>>  12 M
>>>   kernel-headers    x86_64 4.14.13-300.fc27 updates 
>>>   1.2 M
>>
>> Note these packages are from updates.  If the laptop system hasn't been 
>> updated one
>> can use
>>
>> dnf --disablerepo updates --downloadonly --downloaddir=/tmp install 
>> broadcom-wl
>>
>> to get
>>
>>   kernel-devel  x86_64 4.13.9-300.fc27  fedora   
>>   11 M
>>   kernel-headers    x86_64 4.13.9-300.fc27  fedora   
>>  1.2 M
>>
> When doing the --downloadonly,
> how do I disable the dependencies, since they are NOT crucial to networking 
> the
> fc27 machine? 

I do not understand why you throw up artificial barriers to progress.  You're 
going
to be downloading things to a flash drive and walk it over to the other system. 
 So
it isn't as if you're going to be short on space.  Besides, "dependencies" are a
dependency for a reason.  If you ignore those and then try to install packages 
whose
dependency you've ignored you are bound to run in to problems.

You spend more time raising irrelevant issues and then waiting for responses.  
Unless
you are working on more than one machine, we know you now have one Wifi, the 
internal
one, adapter being recognized by the system with the driver loaded.

wlp0s29f7u3: flags=4099  mtu 1500
    ether c0:25:e9:24:89:4b  txqueuelen 1000  (Ethernet)
    RX packets 0  bytes 0 (0.0 B)
    RX errors 0  dropped 0  overruns 0  frame 0
    TX packets 0  bytes 0 (0.0 B)
    TX errors 0  dropped 0 overruns 0  carrier 0  collisions 0

You're just having problems with authentication to a router in a Starbucks.  
I've
already made one suggestion which you've not followed up on.  So, how about 
another? 
Take the machine to a different Wifi Router to where you have access and 
control over it.


-- 
A motto of mine is: When in doubt, try it out


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Re: downloading ALL Packages of a fedora release.

2018-01-22 Thread JD

Sigh!!! Well, yes ...
I will give it a shot.

On 01/22/2018 12:21 PM, Terry Polzin wrote:

Can't you mount an install iso and use it as a local repo?

On Mon, Jan 22, 2018 at 2:14 PM, JD > wrote:




On 01/14/2018 02:22 PM, Ed Greshko wrote:

On 01/15/18 05:19, Ed Greshko wrote:

kernel-devel  x86_64 4.14.13-300.fc27  updates   
12 M
  kernel-headersx86_64 4.14.13-300.fc27  updates 
 1.2 M



Note these packages are from updates.  If the laptop system
hasn't been updated one
can use

dnf --disablerepo updates --downloadonly --downloaddir=/tmp
install broadcom-wl

to get

  kernel-devel  x86_64 4.13.9-300.fc27 fedora 
   11 M
  kernel-headersx86_64 4.13.9-300.fc27 fedora 
  1.2 M


When doing the --downloadonly,
how do I disable the dependencies, since they are NOT crucial to
networking the
fc27 machine?
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Re: downloading ALL Packages of a fedora release.

2018-01-22 Thread Terry Polzin
Can't you mount an install iso and use it as a local repo?

On Mon, Jan 22, 2018 at 2:14 PM, JD  wrote:

>
>
> On 01/14/2018 02:22 PM, Ed Greshko wrote:
>
>> On 01/15/18 05:19, Ed Greshko wrote:
>>
>>> kernel-devel  x86_64 4.14.13-300.fc27 updates
>>> 12 M
>>>   kernel-headersx86_64 4.14.13-300.fc27 updates
>>>  1.2 M
>>>
>>
>> Note these packages are from updates.  If the laptop system hasn't been
>> updated one
>> can use
>>
>> dnf --disablerepo updates --downloadonly --downloaddir=/tmp install
>> broadcom-wl
>>
>> to get
>>
>>   kernel-devel  x86_64 4.13.9-300.fc27  fedora
>>  11 M
>>   kernel-headersx86_64 4.13.9-300.fc27  fedora
>> 1.2 M
>>
>> When doing the --downloadonly,
> how do I disable the dependencies, since they are NOT crucial to
> networking the
> fc27 machine?
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Re: downloading ALL Packages of a fedora release.

2018-01-22 Thread JD



On 01/14/2018 02:22 PM, Ed Greshko wrote:

On 01/15/18 05:19, Ed Greshko wrote:

kernel-devel  x86_64 4.14.13-300.fc27 updates12 
M
  kernel-headersx86_64 4.14.13-300.fc27 updates   
1.2 M


Note these packages are from updates.  If the laptop system hasn't been updated 
one
can use

dnf --disablerepo updates --downloadonly --downloaddir=/tmp install broadcom-wl

to get

  kernel-devel  x86_64 4.13.9-300.fc27  fedora 
11 M
  kernel-headersx86_64 4.13.9-300.fc27  fedora
1.2 M


When doing the --downloadonly,
how do I disable the dependencies, since they are NOT crucial to 
networking the

fc27 machine?
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Re: downloading ALL Packages of a fedora release.

2018-01-14 Thread dirk . gottschalk1980
Hi,

what about using a FTP client with CLI to download the Repository-
directories?

You could download them from one of the FTP morrors to an external HDD
and run createrepo. Then you should be able to use them for
installation.

If your problem is about WiFI not available, you could use an Ethernet
cable and install, or you can install the developer packages, build the
driver and everything should work. AFAIK GCC and the needed Devel-
Packages are already included in the installation disk iomage.

Regards,
Dirk

Am Sonntag, den 14.01.2018, 10:31 -0700 schrieb JD:
> I do understand that robots are not allowed.
> In my current situation, I would NEED to be
> able to download all the Packages, save
> them all on a thumb drive, and make
> yum use that as the repo, to fix my problems
> with a non-networked machined.
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Paulusstrasse 6-8
52064 Aachen
Tel.: +49 1573 1152350

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Re: downloading ALL Packages of a fedora release.

2018-01-14 Thread Ed Greshko
On 01/15/18 05:19, Ed Greshko wrote:
> kernel-devel  x86_64 4.14.13-300.fc27 updates    
> 12 M
>  kernel-headers    x86_64 4.14.13-300.fc27 updates   
> 1.2 M


Note these packages are from updates.  If the laptop system hasn't been updated 
one
can use

dnf --disablerepo updates --downloadonly --downloaddir=/tmp install broadcom-wl

to get

 kernel-devel  x86_64 4.13.9-300.fc27  fedora 
11 M
 kernel-headers    x86_64 4.13.9-300.fc27  fedora    
1.2 M

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Re: downloading ALL Packages of a fedora release.

2018-01-14 Thread Ed Greshko
On 01/15/18 05:00, Ed Greshko wrote:
> On 01/15/18 01:31, JD wrote:
>> I do understand that robots are not allowed.
>> In my current situation, I would NEED to be
>> able to download all the Packages, save
>> them all on a thumb drive, and make
>> yum use that as the repo, to fix my problems
>> with a non-networked machined.
>>
> "Everything"  ?
>
> I don't know why you're making things so difficult.
>
> On a system with a functional internet connection you can find out what 
> packages are
> needed to install the broadcom-wl package from RPMfusion in one of 2 ways.
>
> Way One
>
> 1.  In a Virtual Machine boot the Live-OS of the spin installed on the laptop.
> 2.  Install the RPMfusion repos to the Live-OS.
> 3.  Issue the command   dnf --downloadonly --downloaddir=/tmp install 
> broadcom-wl
> 4.  Transfer the downloaded rpm file to external media
> 5.  Make sure that "kernel" packages downloaded match the kernel version on 
> the
> laptop and if not download those from koji.
>
> Way Two
>
> 1.  Do the exact same as above but after installing the Live-OS in a VM
>
> Way Three
>
> 1.  Boot the Live-OS on bare metal and do the same as above

I did this from a Live-KDE spin 

[root@localhost-live ~]# which wget
/usr/bin/which: no wget in 
(/usr/local/sbin:/usr/local/bin:/usr/sbin:/usr/bin:/root/bin)
[root@localhost-live ~]# dnf install wget
Fedora 27 - x86_64 - Updates   2.5 MB/s |  16 MB 00:06  
 
Fedora 27 - x86_64 4.6 MB/s |  58 MB 00:12  
 
Last metadata expiration check: 0:00:09 ago on Sun 14 Jan 2018 04:14:49 PM EST.
Dependencies resolved.
===
 Package    Arch Version   Repository 
Size
===
Installing:
 wget   x86_64   1.19.2-2.fc27 updates   
732 k

Transaction Summary
===
Install  1 Package

Total download size: 732 k
Installed size: 2.8 M
Is this ok [y/N]: y
Downloading Packages:
wget-1.19.2-2.fc27.x86_64.rpm  1.1 MB/s | 732 kB 00:00  
 
---
Total  492 kB/s | 732 kB 00:01  
  
Running transaction check
Transaction check succeeded.
Running transaction test
Transaction test succeeded.
Running transaction
  Preparing    :   
1/1
  Installing   : wget-1.19.2-2.fc27.x86_64 
1/1
  Running scriptlet: wget-1.19.2-2.fc27.x86_64 
1/1
  Verifying    : wget-1.19.2-2.fc27.x86_64 
1/1

Installed:
  wget.x86_64 1.19.2-2.fc27 
  

Complete!
[root@localhost-live ~]# wget
https://download1.rpmfusion.org/free/fedora/rpmfusion-free-release-27.noarch.rpm
--2018-01-14 16:15:59-- 
https://download1.rpmfusion.org/free/fedora/rpmfusion-free-release-27.noarch.rpm
Resolving download1.rpmfusion.org (download1.rpmfusion.org)... 193.28.235.60
Connecting to download1.rpmfusion.org 
(download1.rpmfusion.org)|193.28.235.60|:443...
connected.
HTTP request sent, awaiting response... 200 OK
Length: 20732 (20K) [application/x-rpm]
Saving to: ‘rpmfusion-free-release-27.noarch.rpm’

rpmfusion-free-relea 100%[=>]  20.25K  71.7KB/s    in 0.3s  
 

2018-01-14 16:16:01 (71.7 KB/s) - ‘rpmfusion-free-release-27.noarch.rpm’ saved
[20732/20732]

[root@localhost-live ~]# wget
https://download1.rpmfusion.org/nonfree/fedora/rpmfusion-nonfree-release-27.noarch.rpm
--2018-01-14 16:16:12-- 
https://download1.rpmfusion.org/nonfree/fedora/rpmfusion-nonfree-release-27.noarch.rpm
Resolving download1.rpmfusion.org (download1.rpmfusion.org)... 193.28.235.60
Connecting to download1.rpmfusion.org 
(download1.rpmfusion.org)|193.28.235.60|:443...
connected.
HTTP request sent, awaiting response... 200 OK
Length: 20580 (20K) [application/x-rpm]
Saving to: ‘rpmfusion-nonfree-release-27.noarch.rpm’

rpmfusion-nonfree-re 100%[=>]  20.10K  75.6KB/s    in 0.3s  
 

2018-01-14 16:16:13 (75.6 KB/s) - ‘rpmfusion-nonfree-release-27.noarch.rpm’ 
saved
[20580/20580]

[root@localhost-live ~]# dnf install ./*rpm
Last metadata expiration check: 0:01:38 ago on Sun 14 Jan 2018 04:14:49 PM EST.
Dependencies resolved.
===
 Package Arch Version Repository  
Size
===
Installing:
 rpmfusion-free-release  noarch   27-1    @commandline    
20 k
 rpmfusion-nonfree-release   noarch   

Re: downloading ALL Packages of a fedora release.

2018-01-14 Thread Ed Greshko
On 01/15/18 01:31, JD wrote:
> I do understand that robots are not allowed.
> In my current situation, I would NEED to be
> able to download all the Packages, save
> them all on a thumb drive, and make
> yum use that as the repo, to fix my problems
> with a non-networked machined.
>

"Everything"  ?

I don't know why you're making things so difficult.

On a system with a functional internet connection you can find out what 
packages are
needed to install the broadcom-wl package from RPMfusion in one of 2 ways.

Way One

1.  In a Virtual Machine boot the Live-OS of the spin installed on the laptop.
2.  Install the RPMfusion repos to the Live-OS.
3.  Issue the command   dnf --downloadonly --downloaddir=/tmp install 
broadcom-wl
4.  Transfer the downloaded rpm file to external media
5.  Make sure that "kernel" packages downloaded match the kernel version on the
laptop and if not download those from koji.

Way Two

1.  Do the exact same as above but after installing the Live-OS in a VM

Way Three

1.  Boot the Live-OS on bare metal and do the same as above



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Re: downloading ALL Packages of a fedora release.

2018-01-14 Thread JD



On 01/14/2018 01:58 PM, Jose Maria Terry Jimenez wrote:


El 14/1/18 a las 21:40, JD escribió:



On 01/14/2018 01:32 PM, Kam Leo wrote:

Have you considered using wget?.

On Sun, Jan 14, 2018 at 10:29 AM, JD > wrote:




On 01/14/2018 10:52 AM, David King wrote:

On 01/14/2018 12:31 PM, JD wrote:

In my current situation, I would NEED to be
able to download all the Packages, save
them all on a thumb drive, and make
yum use that as the repo, to fix my problems
with a non-networked machined.

The first hit from a Google search for "fedora repo on usb" is:
https://ask.fedoraproject.org/en/question/29254/cache-all-the-content-of-fedora-repo-to-a-usb-key/ 

 



Does that do what you want?

Sorry to say: No :(
because I do not have my f27 new install on-line.
It's wifi does not work as is because f27 does not include the
drivers and the firmware for it's wifi Broadcom chipset.
So there is no way.

Also, reposync will sync the OS version of the running OS.
My networked machine runs an old fedora, so cannot sync
up with f27.

If there is a way to do that, I would love to know the incantation.

Cheers,

JD


Not allowed - robots denied.


Hello

rsync as used here? 
https://linuxconfig.org/creating-a-package-repository-on-linux-fedora-and-debian


(Not tried)

Best,

rsync requires you to register with an account.
I really DO NOT want to be a mirror, and it is not so straight-forward how
to limit the mirroring to just the directory Packages of a certain 
release and architecture.

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Re: downloading ALL Packages of a fedora release.

2018-01-14 Thread Jose Maria Terry Jimenez


El 14/1/18 a las 21:40, JD escribió:



On 01/14/2018 01:32 PM, Kam Leo wrote:

Have you considered using wget?.

On Sun, Jan 14, 2018 at 10:29 AM, JD > wrote:




    On 01/14/2018 10:52 AM, David King wrote:

    On 01/14/2018 12:31 PM, JD wrote:

    In my current situation, I would NEED to be
    able to download all the Packages, save
    them all on a thumb drive, and make
    yum use that as the repo, to fix my problems
    with a non-networked machined.

    The first hit from a Google search for "fedora repo on usb" is:
https://ask.fedoraproject.org/en/question/29254/cache-all-the-content-of-fedora-repo-to-a-usb-key/


    Does that do what you want?

    Sorry to say: No :(
    because I do not have my f27 new install on-line.
    It's wifi does not work as is because f27 does not include the
    drivers and the firmware for it's wifi Broadcom chipset.
    So there is no way.

    Also, reposync will sync the OS version of the running OS.
    My networked machine runs an old fedora, so cannot sync
    up with f27.

    If there is a way to do that, I would love to know the incantation.

    Cheers,

    JD


Not allowed - robots denied.


Hello

rsync as used here? 
https://linuxconfig.org/creating-a-package-repository-on-linux-fedora-and-debian


(Not tried)

Best,
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Re: downloading ALL Packages of a fedora release.

2018-01-14 Thread JD



On 01/14/2018 01:32 PM, Kam Leo wrote:

Have you considered using wget?.

On Sun, Jan 14, 2018 at 10:29 AM, JD > wrote:




On 01/14/2018 10:52 AM, David King wrote:

On 01/14/2018 12:31 PM, JD wrote:

In my current situation, I would NEED to be
able to download all the Packages, save
them all on a thumb drive, and make
yum use that as the repo, to fix my problems
with a non-networked machined.

The first hit from a Google search for "fedora repo on usb" is:

https://ask.fedoraproject.org/en/question/29254/cache-all-the-content-of-fedora-repo-to-a-usb-key/



Does that do what you want?

Sorry to say: No :(
because I do not have my f27 new install on-line.
It's wifi does not work as is because f27 does not include the
drivers and the firmware for it's wifi Broadcom chipset.
So there is no way.

Also, reposync will sync the OS version of the running OS.
My networked machine runs an old fedora, so cannot sync
up with f27.

If there is a way to do that, I would love to know the incantation.

Cheers,

JD


Not allowed - robots denied.
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Re: downloading ALL Packages of a fedora release.

2018-01-14 Thread Kam Leo
Have you considered using wget?.

On Sun, Jan 14, 2018 at 10:29 AM, JD  wrote:

>
>
> On 01/14/2018 10:52 AM, David King wrote:
>
>> On 01/14/2018 12:31 PM, JD wrote:
>>
>>> In my current situation, I would NEED to be
>>> able to download all the Packages, save
>>> them all on a thumb drive, and make
>>> yum use that as the repo, to fix my problems
>>> with a non-networked machined.
>>>
>> The first hit from a Google search for "fedora repo on usb" is:
>> https://ask.fedoraproject.org/en/question/29254/cache-all-th
>> e-content-of-fedora-repo-to-a-usb-key/
>>
>> Does that do what you want?
>>
>> Sorry to say: No :(
> because I do not have my f27 new install on-line.
> It's wifi does not work as is because f27 does not include the drivers and
> the firmware for it's wifi Broadcom chipset.
> So there is no way.
>
> Also, reposync will sync the OS version of the running OS.
> My networked machine runs an old fedora, so cannot sync
> up with f27.
>
> If there is a way to do that, I would love to know the incantation.
>
> Cheers,
>
> JD
>
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Re: downloading ALL Packages of a fedora release.

2018-01-14 Thread JD



On 01/14/2018 10:52 AM, David King wrote:

On 01/14/2018 12:31 PM, JD wrote:

In my current situation, I would NEED to be
able to download all the Packages, save
them all on a thumb drive, and make
yum use that as the repo, to fix my problems
with a non-networked machined.

The first hit from a Google search for "fedora repo on usb" is:
https://ask.fedoraproject.org/en/question/29254/cache-all-the-content-of-fedora-repo-to-a-usb-key/

Does that do what you want?


Sorry to say: No :(
because I do not have my f27 new install on-line.
It's wifi does not work as is because f27 does not include the drivers 
and the firmware for it's wifi Broadcom chipset.

So there is no way.

Also, reposync will sync the OS version of the running OS.
My networked machine runs an old fedora, so cannot sync
up with f27.

If there is a way to do that, I would love to know the incantation.

Cheers,

JD
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Re: downloading ALL Packages of a fedora release.

2018-01-14 Thread David King
On 01/14/2018 12:31 PM, JD wrote:
> In my current situation, I would NEED to be
> able to download all the Packages, save
> them all on a thumb drive, and make
> yum use that as the repo, to fix my problems
> with a non-networked machined. 

The first hit from a Google search for "fedora repo on usb" is: 
https://ask.fedoraproject.org/en/question/29254/cache-all-the-content-of-fedora-repo-to-a-usb-key/

Does that do what you want?

-- 
David King
d...@daveking.com
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