hi ya carlos On Sun, 19 Jan 2003, Jan Willem Stumpel wrote:
> Carlos Sousa wrote: > > > I don't know of any simple way to get that info from the package > > management system, but, using an idea that came up on this list > > a few months ago, I have made a little script run by cron every > > day that generates a list of all installed packages, compares > > with the list generated in the previous run, and adds the > > changes, duly timestamped, > > to a history file. and i also keep a (backup) copy of all the binaries and config files so that if its been modified, i can quickly restore that one file ( production boxes should NOT change too often... ( except when "allowed" to be updated and a new checksum is created c ya alvin > > This enables me to get the info you want: > > [..] > > An ingenious idea... > > In the meantime I found another trick which works if you use > apt-get, and do not clean the cache very often: > > ls -lt --time=use /var/cache/apt/archives|less > > The --time=use gives the time when the archives were last used, > i.e. installed, instead of the date there were packaged. > -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]