On Sat, Aug 15, 2009 at 1:01 AM, Bruno Wolff III <<a href="mailto:bruno@wolff.to">bruno@wolff.to</a>> wrote:<br><br>> On Fri, Aug 14, 2009 at 23:32:48 +0530,<br><br>> Jay Mistry <<a href="mailto:jaylinux53@gmail.com">jaylinux53@gmail.com</a>> wrote:<br>
>> I had to re-install Fedora 10 on a home desktop PC. In regard to this:<br>>><br>>> Is it possible to have a local cache/ "repository" of all<br>>> 1) Updates (Critical, Security, Bug-fixes), and<br>
>> 2) Additional installed rpm's (that were installed through PackageKit), e.g.<br>>> Opera, Adobe Reader, etc.<br>>> so that I do not have to download all those again (800 MB + D/L)<br>><br>> Sure. Just put the rpms of interest in a directory, run createrepo on the<br>
> directory and set up an appropriate repo description in<br>> /etc/yum.repos.d/*.repo for some value of *.<br>><br>> For myself I usually mirror the relevant arch parts of updates and<br>> updates-testing and only put a few special things in a local repo.<br>
<br>In addition, there is a yum plugin that may serve the same function:<br><br>
<blockquote style="border-left: 1px solid rgb(204, 204, 204); margin: 0pt 0pt 0pt 0.8ex; padding-left: 1ex;" class="gmail_quote">yum-plugin-local<br>
<br>
When this plugin is installed it will automatically copy all downloaded
packages to a repository on the local file system, and (re)build that
repository. This means that anything you've downloaded will always
exist, even if the original repo removes it (and can thus. be
reinstalled/downgraded/etc.).<br>
</blockquote>
<br>Have just installed it.<br><br>Jay<br><br>--<br>Linux User 483705 @ <a href="http://counter.li.org/">http://counter.li.org/</a> (Linux Counter)<br>