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    Upgradeing Deb packages on multiple machines

    Hi,

    I have 22 Dapper machines that I need to upgrade the .deb files in and I only have a slow dial up modem. It would seem to me that I could do one machine and then copy all the archive files to each of the remaining machines and thus eliminate the long download on the remaining machines but when I try this (both through Adept and shell Konsole) I need to connect to the internet and wait for long downloads again. Should I be able to transfer the downloads by moving the archived .deb files and if so, what might I be doing wrong?

    Ray

    #2
    Re: Upgradeing Deb packages on multiple machines

    This might be worth your while:
    https://help.ubuntu.com/community/AptProxy

    Basically it sets up a package cache on one machine, and other machines can draw packages from there.

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      #3
      Re: Upgradeing Deb packages on multiple machines

      Wonderful! That sounds exactly like what I need. I have visited the site and will download and install the application.

      Thanks,

      Ray in the mountains of Nepal

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        #4
        Re: Upgradeing Deb packages on multiple machines

        You can also try squid. It is a caching proxy, which, while I haven't tried either, is supposed to work better than apt-proxy... Give them both a try, but sqid sounds a lot easier.

        See: http://www.bel.fi/~alankila/blog/200...20failure.html

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          #5
          Re: Upgradeing Deb packages on multiple machines

          Thanks, I will give it a try. It could be exactly what I need.

          Ray

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            #6
            Re: Upgrading Deb packages on multiple machines

            Another (low-tech) option is aptoncd, (sudo apt-get install aptoncd) which backs up your apt sources to CD, which you would then take from machine to machine, assuming they are not all on the same network. I use this to get the apps on my work machine onto my home machine without having to waste bandwidth. I suppose the rider is that both machines need to be more or less "synched" in terms of Ubuntu version/kernel and libraries. It's also a good way of "backing up" all those painstakingly downloaded apps in the event of a disk crash.

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