[K12OSN] updating problem
Aaron Sulwer
asulwer at yahoo.com
Thu Mar 15 18:30:48 UTC 2007
i have this problem when i use any of the repos. here is the specific error
that i get.
13:29:37 : --> Preparing for install
13:29:37 : --> Preparing for remove
13:29:37 : --> Preparing for a partial update
13:29:37 : --> Populating transaction set with selected packages. Please wait.
13:29:37 : ---> Downloading header for kernel-headers to pack into transaction
set.
13:29:37 : Getting :
http://k12linux.mesd.k12.or.us/K12LTSP/6.0.0-32bit/updates/kernel-headers-2.6.20-1.2925.fc6.i386.rpm
13:29:41 : Failure getting
http://k12linux.mesd.k12.or.us/K12LTSP/6.0.0-32bit/updates/kernel-headers-2.6.20-1.2925.fc6.i386.rpm:
13:29:41 : --> [Errno -1] Header is not complete.
13:29:41 : Trying other mirror.
--- David Hopkins <dahopkins429 at gmail.com> wrote:
> Which repository is it looking for? I get this with at-stable. My issue is
> I have to use the State proxy which wants to cache information. If this is
> the issue, you need to set the proxy information for yum to use the proxy
> and also tell the proxy not to cache info. the proxy info can be set in the
> config file for yum. Another issue I have is that the baseurl had to be
> modified slightly. I will be at the school tomorrow and can provide an
> example if needed then.
>
> Sincerely,
> Dave Hopkins
>
>
> On 3/15/07, Aaron Sulwer <asulwer at yahoo.com> wrote:
> >
> > i have been trying to use yum and software updater to update k12ltsp and i
> > keep
> > getting this error about no more mirrors to try dependency error 256,
> > anything
> > i try to update gives me this error, i am logged in as root and i am using
> > version 6
> >
> > To an optimist the glass is half full.
> > To a pessimist the glass is half empty.
> > To a programmer the glass is twice as big as it needs to be.
> >
> > _______________________________________________
> > K12OSN mailing list
> > K12OSN at redhat.com
> > https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/k12osn
> > For more info see <http://www.k12os.org>
> >
>
To an optimist the glass is half full.
To a pessimist the glass is half empty.
To a programmer the glass is twice as big as it needs to be.
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