On Monday 17 December 2007 18:29:20 Gilles Pelletier wrote: > I found out the MD5SUMs are in the package itself but where are the > signatures? I suppose they're in the file that is updated when you do an > update. But where is this file?
The foo_0.2_arch.changes file for each upload can be signed and contains the md5 checksums of the package files. I'm not sure where apt gets a copy of this from. > Why are every file in the package md5summed ? Wouldn't a sum on the > whole package be enough? I'm not completely sure but one application I can think of would be to track changes or to check easily whether files in two packages are identical. It's a bit redundant but where's the harm? > I had a bad experience while trying to install guarddog on Knoppix > (installed)this weekend. Synaptic apparently did a full update before > installing guarddog, even chinese keyboards! That took a long time! It > was getting late and the fine print was really, really small. At one > point it asked if I wanted to restart the computer or continue. I was in > no mood to restart and thought "What the heck, I'll see to this later!" > > When I rebooted I had the message "Starting system log daemon: syslogd" > and the system hanged there. I rebooted with a Kubuntu Live-CD and tried > to find an answer to this problem on the net, but in vain. So, I > rebooted and removed savedefault on the boot prompt. The boot hanged > very soon. I put back savedefault, and it finally worked. Lots of > headaches! > > Is there a Linux distro that won't let you continue when you *have* to > reboot? You know, more foolproof. You pretty much never have to reboot when running a Linux-based OS. Many server admins cannot afford to reboot so anything that tried to force them to wouldn't go down well. Knoppix is not really intended to be used as a disk-based OS and may be rough around the edges with regards to updating, packages, etc as few people will be testing this behaviour. Perhaps you could try a proper Debian install?
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