<snip> > Quoting Shaleh ([EMAIL PROTECTED]): > > > > On 09-Mar-99 Paulo Henrique Baptista de Oliveira wrote: > > > Hi Debian users, > > > In my country (Brazil) I only have to pay one tax between 0:00 and > > > 6:00 AM independent of call time. > > > I'm start thinking to get my home machine live at night and set crontab > > > to use pon or wvdial (I have two account, one with pon and other with > > > wvdial) and use /etc/ppp/ip-up.d/script_to_upgrade. > > > Am I following the right path to solution? > > > The script will be only: > > > #!/bin/bash > > > apt-get update > > > apt-get dist-upgrade > > > ? > > > Have a nice day, Paulo Henrique > > > > > > > > > > Yes, except for the fact that the install needs you there to hit enter a few > > times. Apt says "is this correct [Y/n]", "press enter to continue". The > > packages scripts may ask you for info as well.
You can add the -y switch to your apt-get command to automatically answer "yes" to all the promts. This would facilitate unattended updates. Be shure to read your logs though to see what got replaced durring the night! I set my system up like this. It has worked _almost_ perfectly (having your dot-files replaced without your knowledge can be anoying). It is nice though to wake up each morning to find that _everything_ on your system is up to date. Two examples of problems I encountered are: 1. One day after some updates gnome stopped working. I never use it anyway so I didn't even try to fix it yet. 2. Another day I went to print a document and couldn't access /dev/lp0. Apt-get had updated the lpr package durring the night and replaced the permissions file with a new one that locked me out. Easy to fix, but an inconvenience. Good luck. - Ben Messinger -- If Micro$oft were a pharmacutical company I would hate to think what they might do to get us to buy more pain medication.