Jude DaShiell wrote:
The apt-cd package may help here.
I don't find "apt-cd". Do you mean "apt-cdrom" which "is used to add a new CD-ROM to APT's list of available sources." I am NOT using the CDs/DVDs themselves. I have copied the contents to a hard disk partition for speed and convenience - not having high speed internet.
Also when searching for tutorials I find it useful to append "tutorial OR howto" to google searches for problems like this. The howtos get you into another probably useful category.
Been that route ;< https://wiki.debian.org/HowToSetupADebianRepository#dpkg-scanpackages_and_dpkg-scansourcespoints to http://www.debian.org/doc/manuals/repository-howto/repository-howto.en.html
which has two problems: 1. Its title labels it as "Obsolete Documentation" 2. I can't figure how to apply what it says to my case.It comes closer to my case than what I've found using Google to search for dpkg-scanpackages "tutorials"/"How-To".
On Tue, 5 Nov 2013, Richard Owlett wrote:Joe wrote:On Mon, 04 Nov 2013 10:55:10 -0600 Richard Owlett <rowlett@cloud85.net> wrote:To borrow from the hardware world, man pages would correspond to Product Specification. What I'm looking for would correspond more with an Application Note.I think the magic word you want is 'tutorial'. You probably also want to set time limits, as one of the most useless things in the world is an obsolete tutorial. Man pages on the web are usually current. If you want something a bit unusual, such as an obscure freeRADIUS application, you probably want to track down half a dozen tutorials, and try to read between the lines. It's surprising how much can be left out of a set of 'step-by-step' instructions, but different people generally leave out different things.I think you just hit on why 'tutorials' did not come to mind. The Debian tutorials I've seen have another problem in my situation - taking the reader from one specific starting point to one specific end point. That normally is not a problem for the reader as start/end points are aimed at majority. My problem with the dpkg-scanpackages man pages is that I don't seem to be able to apply it correctly to my situation. I wish to have a local repository whose structure mimics the distribution DVDs. I have a partition dedicated to my local repository. It is mounted as /media/repo6 . {I'm working on my Squeeze machine at the moment. Eventually I'll dual boot Wheezy and Squeeze. Then I'll add another repository partition mounted as /media/repo7 etc.} Directory structure is: /media/repo6/dists/squeeze/contrib/binary-i386 /media/repo6/dists/squeeze/contrib/binary-i386/release /media/repo6/dists/squeeze/main /media/repo6/dists/squeeze/main/binary-i386 /media/repo6/dists/squeeze/main/binary-i386/release /media/repo6/pool /media/repo6/pool/squeeze /media/repo6/pool/squeeze/contrib /media/repo6/pool/squeeze/contrib/... {directories containing deb files} /media/repo6/pool/squeeze/main /media/repo6/pool/squeeze/main/... {directories containing deb files} I need appropriate Packages.gz under /media/repo6/dists/squeeze/contrib/binary-i386 and /media/repo6/dists/squeeze/main/binary-i386 . I also need appropriate lines to add to sources.list--------------------------------------------------------------------------- jude <jdashiel@shellworld.net> Avoid the Gates Of Hell, use Linux!