Norbert Tretkowski said:
> * Ivan Adams wrote:
>> My quiestion is how I can avoid that kind of problems when on some
>> Debian I have that kind of apt scripts.
>
> Disable those kind of scripts, and use apt-cron to let you inform by
> mail when updates are available.
I'de also reccomend running ap
* Ivan Adams wrote:
> My quiestion is how I can avoid that kind of problems when on some
> Debian I have that kind of apt scripts.
Disable those kind of scripts, and use apt-cron to let you inform by
mail when updates are available.
Norbert
--
personal - http://www.inittab.de/
debian - http://p
[ cc-ed back to debian-isp ]
On Tue, Sep 07, 2004 at 09:21:20PM +0300, Ivan Adams wrote:
> but how can i understand when there have critical backdoor in some of my
> packets in all Debians and need upgrade!
subscribe to the security alert lists and upgrade when advised.
you're trying to automate
On Sun, Sep 05, 2004 at 10:58:40PM +0300, Ivan Adams wrote:
> I used script with apt-get upgrade -y on Debian 3.0 Woody in crond.
> Everything was ok when one day call me for problem in that linux. When I
> enter in console I saw in logs that previous day he was apt-get upgrade -y
> and upgraded s
On Sun, 5 Sep 2004 22:58:40 +0300, Ivan wrote in message
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
> Hi,
> I used script with apt-get upgrade -y on Debian 3.0 Woody in crond.
> Everything was ok when one day call me for problem in that linux.
> When I enter in console I saw in logs that previous day he was apt-get
>
Hi,
I used script with apt-get upgrade -y on Debian 3.0 Woody in crond.
Everything was ok when one day call me for problem in that linux.
When I enter in console I saw in logs that previous day he was apt-get
upgrade -y
and upgraded squid. The problem was the new version of squid has one
more optio
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