On Tuesday 17 October 2006 08:27, Miroslav Maiksnar wrote: > Dne úterý 17 říjen 2006 16:39 Preston Boyington napsal(a): > > alright folks, give me some ideas as to why there are differences > > between these two laptops. > > > > i loaded Debian on my first laptop, changed my sources to my favorite > > ones, installed all the programs and codecs i could think of that i > > might want. > > > > then i did the ol': > > dpkg --get-selections > packages.txt > > > > i then loaded a base Debian install on my second laptop, changed the > > sources like on my first laptop, and proceeded to run: > > apt-get update > > dpkg --set-selections < packages.txt > > apt-get dselect-upgrade > > > > everything loaded just fine, except i notice that there are differences > > in things like my Gnome icon for battery/charging/plug. it's different > > than my first laptop. also after an update last night on the second > > laptop i lost a desktop shortcut to the /share partition that was there > > initially. (i haven't updated the first laptop to see if the same thing > > will happen.) > > > > the Gnome versions should be the same (2.14.3 i think), so why the minor > > discrepancies? they are not "show stoppers" by any means, i am just > > curious. > > Problem is, when you use --get/set-selections combo, you loose information > about exact package versions (needed for stable/testing/unstable mix) and > you also loose dependency info for aptitude (all packages will behave like > manually installed). In general, --get/set-selections can make identical > installs only when using stable release without aptitude. > > And of course, if you want identical installations, you also need to > transfer configurations (/etc, /home/*/.*), as it is initially set to > default when you install package, but this default can be different between > two versions of the same package. So on "new" computer you will have "new" > default config, which will probably be somehow different from "old" > computer (depends on release and package updates). > > I would do identical installs using bootable linux CDs (knoppix) and > something like `tar c /old_root/ | ssh other_comp 'tar x -C /new_root/'` > > Mixi
If I may go a bit off topic for a moment, how would one go about backing up and restoring the packages installed AND the installed versions of those packages? Thanks in advance. -- Robert Miesen