This is easy with Fedora, as the various 'common' repos are listed and all I have to do is change the URL.... Anyway, I am doing a netinstall of Centos 6.3 i386 from my local repo. I also have the updates repo. How can I add the updates repo so that I get it up to snuff right away (like I have been doing with Fedora for quite some time)? thanks.
On Tue, Dec 4, 2012 at 9:50 PM, Robert Moskowitz <rgm at htt-consult.com> wrote:> This is easy with Fedora, as the various 'common' repos are listed and > all I have to do is change the URL.... > > Anyway, I am doing a netinstall of Centos 6.3 i386 from my local repo. > I also have the updates repo. How can I add the updates repo so that I > get it up to snuff right away (like I have been doing with Fedora for > quite some time)?You can use the --cost option in the repo section (http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Anaconda/Kickstart#repo). This works for me: repo --name="Centos" --baseurl=http://host/mrepo/centos6-i386/RPMS.os --cost=100 repo --name="Centos updates" --baseurl=http://host/mrepo/centos6-i386/RPMS.updates --cost=100 -- groet, natxo
On 04.12.2012 20:50, Robert Moskowitz wrote:> This is easy with Fedora, as the various 'common' repos are listed > and > all I have to do is change the URL.... > > Anyway, I am doing a netinstall of Centos 6.3 i386 from my local > repo. > I also have the updates repo. How can I add the updates repo so that > I > get it up to snuff right away (like I have been doing with Fedora for > quite some time)? > > thanks. >Hi, Yes, you can simply add another repo, name it whatever you want (e.g. updates) then add the local path, e.g. http://192.168.0.1/centos/6/updates/x86_64/ I do this all the time when I install, too (though I use the PXE method to initialise it). -- Sent from the Delta quadrant using Borg technology! Nux! www.nux.ro