jigdo vs binary diff
On Wed, Jun 09, 2004 at 08:45:05PM +0300, George Danchev wrote:
> what advantages I'll get when using jigdo to update my old image instead of
> patching the old iso with rdiff.
Well, Debian doesn't offer CD image upgrades in rdiff/xdelta format.
Generally, IMHO jigdo has the following advantages over binary diffs:
- jigdo allows you to update to your image from /any/ previous version of
the same image. That's most useful with weekly snapshots - imagine having
to download and apply 6 "patches" because you last fetched a weekly
snapshot 6 weeks ago.
- you can download all the changed/new packages from any Debian mirror, not
just designated "CD patch mirrors". With patches, IMHO many regular
Debian mirrors would not be too excited about mirroring large patch
files, so the few mirrors who offered them would be fairly busy.
- related to the point above: Debian does not need to duplicate the data
for the changed/new packages on the servers in a binary diff, which saves
space. (jigdo can download these packages from the "normal archive" of
packages on a Debian server.)
- jigdo allows completely different kinds of "updates", e.g. you can update
from a set of CD images to one DVD image, without downloading all the
package data again.
- jigdo updates still work fine in case your old CD has read errors.
Cheers,
Richard
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