Quoting Roland Clobus (2022-09-21 22:03:33)
> As to the origin of my question: The snapshot-mirror has been offline for a
> while, and I've used deb.debian.org to generate my test images (for the
> reproducible live-build-based live-ISO images). I've compared the timestamps
> of the InRelease file
Hello all,
Thank you all for your replies so far.
On 19/09/2022 16:41, Mattia Rizzolo wrote:
On Sun, Sep 18, 2022 at 10:58:37AM +0200, Roland Clobus wrote:
All of these timestamps (for sid) are close to each other, but not
identical. I would guess that the earliest timestamp is the 'real'
time
On Sun, Sep 18, 2022 at 10:58:37AM +0200, Roland Clobus wrote:
> All of these timestamps (for sid) are close to each other, but not
> identical. I would guess that the earliest timestamp is the 'real'
> timestamp, but it is accessible (on snapshot.d.o) only with a later
> timestamp.
Consider that
On Sun, Sep 18, 2022 at 01:56:14PM +0200, Johannes Schauer Marin Rodrigues
wrote:
> Hi Roland,
>
> Quoting Roland Clobus (2022-09-18 10:58:37)
> > I'm looking for 'the' timestamp of the Debian Archive, which will allow me
> > to
> > virtually travel through time to re-generate a specific state o
Hi Roland,
Quoting Roland Clobus (2022-09-18 10:58:37)
> I'm looking for 'the' timestamp of the Debian Archive, which will allow me to
> virtually travel through time to re-generate a specific state of Debian.
Holger just suggested on IRC that I reply to your mail -- probably with my
metasnap.deb
Hello Debian developers,
I'm looking for 'the' timestamp of the Debian Archive, which will allow
me to virtually travel through time to re-generate a specific state of
Debian.
I've looked at the following places:
* http://ftp.debian.org/debian/dists/bullseye/InRelease
File timestamp: 2022-0
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