On Mon, 15 Jan 2018, Josh W. wrote:
So I posted about either having a faulty .iso and non-public keys.
In your previous thread,... https://lists.debian.org/msgid-search/CAG9XMTsz4Ak+4=xvy_ogyufe61eeygf5k3jdb4rhp6nwsd6...@mail.gmail.com ... it looks like you included possibly important details in an attached file that was not plain text. If you want people here to examine what you post, post it in plain text format. If cutting/pasting copious output is cumbersome or not possible, you can write it to a file like so: If, let's say, someone asked you to post the output of $ apt policy debian-archive keyring then you could run this: $ apt policy debian-archive-keyring |& tee d-a-k_policy_for_jonathan Any output would then be displayed as usual, and would also be written to a file named "d-a-k_policy_for_jonathan", located in the current directory. You could then include the contents of that file in your message to debian-user (or attach it to your message). Before running the command, do check the contents of the current directory first, to make sure that you have chosen a destination filename that does not already exist there (in the above example, "d-a-k_policy_for_jonathan"). Otherwise the "tee" command will overwrite it with the apt command's output and you will lose whatever used to be there. Likewise, if you cared to post any troubling messages that you see when you run... $ sudo apt-get install wine ...then you could run something like the following instead, to save the output to a file, by adding "|& tee FILENAME" to the end of your command: $ sudo apt-get install wine |& tee install-wine.log Speaking of output, I have yet to see posted in plain text: * precisely what commands produced error messages about public keys. * the output from those commands. There is a lot of expertise on this list, but even experts need some material to work with: materials like precisely what commands you issued, and their output. Messages that appear to be full of redundant pointless noise to you might be very informative to others.
I've looked around in my /etc/apt/sources.list file. Maybe i have to many repos or just not the right ones... I have tried netselect on a bunch but not really getting any where. Here is the output of my sources.list file as of now. I commented out the Oracle VM repo, the "Also a Secondary" repo, and also the first repo under the cdrom repo... When i tried the netselect it gave me ip address's that didn't go anywhere. Not sure on what to do next... Can somebody point me in the right direction.
You could begin by replying, in full, to this attempt to help you: https://lists.debian.org/msgid-search/1515499451.12102.2.ca...@debian.org It is helpful, by the way, that you posted the contents of your sources.list. Good luck with your project. -- P: C'est Darth Vader qui rentre dans une boulangerie. Il demande quoi à ton avis? Q: ... P: 3 pains et deux tartes tatins! Tu sais pourquoi? Q: ...? P: PAIN PAIN PAIN TARTE TATIN TARTE TATIN