On Thu, Apr 27, 2006 at 08:38:44PM -0400, Gil Citro wrote: > On 4/25/06, Digby Tarvin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > > > > The poster said in the original post that by "full" install he doesn't > > mean every possible Debian package, just "as if I'd installed everything > > from > > the DVD". > > > > And the reason given was, if I understood correctly, was to help avoid > > dependency problems when trying to install/build/develop software > > manually. > > > > Thanks for the reply. That does sum up what I want to do and why. > Unfortunately, it sounds like that's not possible at this time. > > The next best thing would be to copy all the files from both DVDs to > the hard drive, and be able to apt-get anything from the hard drive, > unless the package has been updated, in which case copy the newer > version from a mirror. > > I found this > http://www.debian.org/doc/manuals/apt-howto/ch-basico.en.html > > which seems to explain how to install debs from the hard drive if all > the debs are in one directory, but on the DVD they are all under a > directory called pool, some on each DVD, with many nested > sub-directories. I could move them to one directory, but I'm guessing > that's not the best way or even a good way. > > Also, it doesn't explain how to check a mirror before installing the > local copy of the package. I guess I could install the local copy and > the do an update from a mirror, but I'm guessing that's also not the > best way.
Really, if you're going to be checking the mirrors for new versions anyway, you might as well get your packages from the net. I missed the beginning of the thread, so maybe there are other factors here. If you are running anything but stable, the packages are updated constantly, so you'd end up pulling from the net anyway. If you are running stable, there are security updates which may or may not be important to you, but are still out there. So, unless you have bandwidth issues, pulling packages from the net is the best bet. A > > If anyone can suggest how to do one or both of these things, I'd > appreciate it. Thanks again. > > Gil >
signature.asc
Description: Digital signature