You can save the contents of /var/cache/apt/archives from install to
install in order to not having to redownload the DEBs.

Debootsrap is far more complex than a simple knoppix
hard-disk-install. You've been told.

On Wed, 5 Jan 2005 23:57:28 +0100, Pau Capdevila
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Wasn't he asking for debootstrap?
> 
> http://www.inittab.de/manuals/debootstrap.html [Debian GNU/Linux
> Installation with Knoppix and debootstrap]
> 
> With debootstrap you can install woody, sarge and even sid.
> 
> I've installed all of them with any problem.
> 
> But first I recomend a livecd hard disk install and play a bit with
> apt. Who says that is not-Debian! If not how have I learnt Debian with
> Knoppix?
> 
> Debootstrap leaves the base packages, then you install initrd-tools a
> kernel ...There's an online manual.
> 
> Then you can install the packages you want (you have to be familiar
> with apt/dpkg to search the packages you need/want)
> 
> But if you're used with LFS there will be no problem.
> 
> Did anybody respond your question?
> 
> On Wed, 05 Jan 2005 09:02:57 -0600, Kent West <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > David T-G wrote:
> >
> > >I also don't want to take my first pass at this on the server, a fragile
> > >node in the household.  It would be much better to test on a spare box
> > >first.  That, then, also leads to why a mirror would be useful (I'd save
> > >myself *two* frustrating WAN installs).
> > >
> > >The test machine is a typical PC and I plan to get it installed and then
> > >upgrade it to Sarge (which I plan to run on the server mentioned above).
> > >I should be able to knoppix-installer it and then, I believe,
> > >
> > >  apt-get distupgrade
> > >
> > >to fill in all of the missing pieces (how do I specify the software set?)
> > >and maybe or maybe not upgrade to Sarge; it's still unclear to me whether
> > >or not Knoppix 3.7 is Woody or Sarge in the first place (though I *think*
> > >the latter).
> > >
> > >
> >
> > Rather than Knoppix, you might look into Kanotix, which is closer to
> > "pure Debian", I believe.
> >
> > Rather than starting with something non-Debian and moving to Debian, I'd
> > start with Debian, Sarge, to be exact.
> >
> > You imply that you're going to "apt-get dist-upgrade" via the net (as I
> > can't imagine any other way you can upgrade without having some source
> > of files, and you mention no other source). I'd get the netinstaller for
> > Sarge (http://www.debian.org/devel/debian-installer/, which is something
> > like 50 or 100MB, small enough to fit on a jump drive if your machine
> > will boot from it, or a mini-CD, or a regular CD, etc), and do the rest
> > of the install over the net. You say your DSL connection is lousy, but
> > it can't be worse than a dial-up connection, which I've used many times
> > to do a full install of Debian, with X and other heavyweight apps. Once
> > you have the .debs downloaded (in /var/cache/apt/archives), you can keep
> > them and burn them to CD or move them over the LAN to other machines,
> > and place them in the ...archives directory there and install them from
> > the local repository. I mean, what's the purpose of having DSL if you
> > don't use it?
> >
> > Since this is a server, you probably won't need X and OpenOffice.org and
> > KDE and gimp and blah blah blah, so a small install over a lousy LAN
> > sounds a whole lot easier than futzing with a non-Debian installer and
> > then converting.
> >
> > Just my 1/6th of a bit's worth (rounded).
> >
> > --
> > Kent
> >
> >
> > --
> > To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> > with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> >
> >
>


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