On Saturday 01 November 2003 18:38, Haines Brown wrote: > Jakob, a little light is begging to shine. In my reading I did not see > anything about apt-cdrom, and so had to guess what had to be added to > the config file. I guessed, wrong, it seems. > > > > Err http://ftp.br.debian.org woody/main Packages > > > Could not connect to 127.0.0.1:3128 (127.0.0.1). - connect > > > (111 Connection refused) > > > > Hello, > > this means that your proxy is down. Remove the proxy settings from your > > /etc/ apt.conf and run apt-get update again. > > I removed the http subsection I had put into the /etc/apt/apt.conf > file, and ran the apt-get update. Not sure if I succeeded. There was a > lot I missed because scrolled off my xterm, and I can't copy/paste > from xterm to get a decent example. > > However, from what I see, there's a lot about apt-get update should > not be used to add new cds; I should use apt-cdrom for that (now that > I know such a command exists, the man page is somewhat useful). A set > of warnings like this is repeated for each of the seven original disks > I had used to install debian. In fact, the entire response that I can > see consists of this, except for the three final lines: Reading > package lists..., Building dependency tree..., E: some index files > failed to download. This means that apt couldn't download some files. You can redirect the output of apt-get update to a file to see which files couldn't be downloaded: apt-get update 2>&1 >apt.log less apt.log Probably you have either a typo in your /etc/apt/sources.list or your apt mirror is down.
Regards Jakob -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]