Kai Schaetzl wrote:
Ashley M. Kirchner wrote on Fri, 12 Oct 2007 08:59:53 -0600:
Uhhh, I don't experience that when I run my rsync script. It
actually does delete stuff that's no longer on the mirror.
Yeah, but the repo seems to keep a lot ... I downloaded 5 or more versions
of the same
On Thu, 11 Oct 2007, Lorenzo Quatrini wrote:
Kai Schaetzl ha scritto:
Lorenzo wrote on Thu, 11 Oct 2007 09:38:21 +0200:
Have you tried mrepo?
How would this help? The main problem is to get rid of the old updates.
Kai
You're right, I thought that mrepo would get rid of old updates
Kai Schaetzl wrote:
Apparently, I
can avoid it when regularly downloading by specifying a timelimit, but I
can't avoid getting it all when I start a mirror (unless I use a
filelist).
That wouldn't be a mirror then, would it? :) I suppose, if you're
really wanting to, one thing you could
Ashley M. Kirchner wrote on Fri, 12 Oct 2007 08:59:53 -0600:
Uhhh, I don't experience that when I run my rsync script. It
actually does delete stuff that's no longer on the mirror.
Yeah, but the repo seems to keep a lot ... I downloaded 5 or more versions
of the same rpm of some software
Kai Schaetzl ha scritto:
I figured I try if I can mirror the base and updates repos locally.
There's no tutorial for that, only one about creating your own repo of
packages which is not the same. So, I just mirrored all the stuff with
wget and changed the baseurl in the repo files and hoped
Lorenzo wrote on Thu, 11 Oct 2007 09:38:21 +0200:
Have you tried mrepo?
How would this help? The main problem is to get rid of the old updates.
Kai
--
Kai Schätzl, Berlin, Germany
Get your web at Conactive Internet Services: http://www.conactive.com
Mark pryor wrote on Wed, 10 Oct 2007 13:30:46 -0700 (PDT):
I only have a comment about the base mirror. Instead of using the internet to
make a base mirror (not sure you did it that way), you can use the
CentOS-Media.repo
Ah, well, I remember having read about this, but admit I didn't think
On Thu, 11 Oct 2007, Lorenzo Quatrini wrote:
Kai Schaetzl ha scritto:
Lorenzo wrote on Thu, 11 Oct 2007 09:38:21 +0200:
Have you tried mrepo?
How would this help? The main problem is to get rid of the old updates.
Kai
Back in the old days, I used to use autoupdate .. and I believe
Kai Schaetzl ha scritto:
Lorenzo wrote on Thu, 11 Oct 2007 09:38:21 +0200:
Have you tried mrepo?
How would this help? The main problem is to get rid of the old updates.
Kai
You're right, I thought that mrepo would get rid of old updates by himself, but
id doesn't.
I am looking right now
Kai Schaetzl wrote:
Thanks, but this will still download and keep *all* updates for a
platform.
If they exist on the mirror, then yes. However, anything that gets
removed from the mirror you're using, will also get deleted from your
local copy. That's the whole idea behind rsync's
I figured I try if I can mirror the base and updates repos locally.
There's no tutorial for that, only one about creating your own repo of
packages which is not the same. So, I just mirrored all the stuff with
wget and changed the baseurl in the repo files and hoped that's enough.
Works. So
Kai Schaetzl wrote:
I figured I try if I can mirror the base and updates repos locally.
There's no tutorial for that, only one about creating your
own repo of
packages which is not the same. So, I just mirrored all the
stuff with
wget and changed the baseurl in the repo files and
Kai Schaetzl [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: I figured I try if I can mirror the
base and updates repos locally.
There's no tutorial for that, only one about creating your own repo of
packages which is not the same. So, I just mirrored all the stuff with
wget and changed the baseurl in the repo
Kai Schaetzl wrote:
*But* I then realized that the updates directory contains *all* updates,
not just the latest. Which means if I don't regularly check I may get old
versions mirrored I don't want. It also means that I get a lot of unwanted
files at the time I start to mirror. And I cannot
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