That works, at least sort of. I noticed that the unit_id values for
non-rpm content types don't seem to be unique between repos. Also my
script failed to remove ~2000 RPMs from my local-centos-6-base repo.
Curious if there's some special technique required to make one repo a
mirror of the other w
Try association for filter, instead of unit.
Just ran into this situation in the past week.
▶ Show quoted text
On Dec 13, 2015 05:05, "Trey Dockendorf" wrote:
> I'm attempting to cleanup some of my repositories via API, and am finding
> I can successfully remove everything except RPMs. Right no
I'm attempting to cleanup some of my repositories via API, and am finding I
can successfully remove everything except RPMs. Right now I have a repo
like 'centos-6-base' that is synced against CentOS 6 base repo. I then
copy all the content to another repo, 'local-centos-6-base'. Normally I
copy
Hi
Just putting this out there in case anyone finds it useful. I've
created a vagrant project for Pulp here:
https://github.com/liger1978/vagrant-pulp
This is aimed at end users who want to try Pulp rather than at developers.
Best
Richard
___
Pulp-l
The Pulp team is pleased to announce that we have released 2.7.1 to our stable
repositories[0]. This release contains a fix for a bug that caused workers to
disappear [1].
Happy upgrading!
--Austin
[0] https://repos.fedorapeople.org/repos/pulp/pulp/stable/2.7/
[1] https://pulp.plan.io/issues/1
After a small amount of discussion we have decided to deprecate Pulp's
Puppet deployment repository. To be clear, this is not the Puppet
package plugin, but the Puppet code that can be used to deploy Pulp.
This pull request adds a note about this to the README.md in the
repository that contains a l