Michael Orlitzky <michael <at> orlitzky.com> writes:

> On 04/30/2012 09:40 PM, Michael Orlitzky wrote:
> > And, the cookies don't get set in a normal HTTP request.
> For this to make sense, you probably want to read, "HTML request."

Ok, I've got to think about all of this feedback 
and figure out what to do. I'm leaning towards 
manual download, once, and then an automation
script that runs each time I do an update. That
script would check for Fetch restricted packages on each
machine locally, as there cannot be too many that I use,
and then download the latest version via scp from a 
(suggested) previous download.


Maybe this is a chance to play with port-knocking before
allowing the local file transfer.... I gotta
think about how I want to do this. My network is
"hard partition" internally, as portions move to different
locations and must be "stand alone" no matter how the
partitions are split. For now, the partitions do not
morph (change in component count).

** note** a partition does not reference a hard drive
scheme but the fact that security and feature enhancements
are achieved by physical and/or software isolation. 

Each partition should be fully functional and survivable 
from frequent physical separation. Each partition can contain 
one or more computational/storage resources and are not
similar in component count.


thanks for all the responses,
James



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