On Sun, Nov 19, 2000 at 12:55:00PM -0700, Mike Fisk wrote:
> There doesn't seem to be an automatic way to get all of the unstable
> packages necessary to address reported security problems. You either
> have to watch the security mailing lists and upgrade individual packages
> yourself or do a full dist-upgrade every so often. As often as packages
> get updated in unstable, that can be prohibitibely bandwidth and
> time-consuming.
Set up a cron job to do the downloads while you sleep. Do the
apt-get dist-upgrade while you're sitting in front of it, in case anything
goes wrong, of course. This is much faster, since you are going off your
hard drive instead of downloading.
I do this:
55 5 * * sun root apt-get update && apt-get autoclean && apt-get -q -d -y -u
dist-upgrade
This uses -d, so it _will not_ do anything more than download. You have to
use -y, but it is safe since you are using -d.
I've been doing this for several months, and I haven't had any problems
with it. It sends me a nice email detailing what got deleted and what is
ready to get installed.
If I'm busy that weekend and there weren't any security critical things
(except for local-user stuff, which I don't bust my butt about since the
only people who have accounts are my family, and they have physical access
anyway. (err, also there's the fact that I trust them:) )
Happy hacking.
--
#define X(x,y) x##y
Peter Cordes ; e-mail: X([EMAIL PROTECTED] , ns.ca)
"The gods confound the man who first found out how to distinguish the hours!
Confound him, too, who in this place set up a sundial, to cut and hack
my day so wretchedly into small pieces!" -- Plautus, 200 BCE
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