Chrome Browser in Ubuntu 17.04
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@scottalanmiller Whether the same issue will occur in Ubuntu 16.10 OS.The reinstallation proceesss?
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@Lakshmana said in Chrome Browser in Ubuntu 17.04:
@scottalanmiller Full DVD means all iso in the ubuntu page?
After a quick glance at the alternate downloads for Ubuntu, it doesn't appear that they have an "Everything DVD" like Debian provides.
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@travisdh1 said in Chrome Browser in Ubuntu 17.04:
@Lakshmana said in Chrome Browser in Ubuntu 17.04:
@scottalanmiller Full DVD means all iso in the ubuntu page?
After a quick glance at the alternate downloads for Ubuntu, it doesn't appear that they have an "Everything DVD" like Debian provides.
Ya you would probably have to make a local repo for everything. Never done it on Ubuntu, but it's relatively easy with RHEL.
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Ubuntu never makes things easy, does it.
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@Lakshmana said in Chrome Browser in Ubuntu 17.04:
@scottalanmiller Whether the same issue will occur in Ubuntu 16.10 OS.The reinstallation proceesss?
Possible. But at least it is stable, supported and known. 17.04 isn't ready to be used at all yet.
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I am with the crowd, use 16.10.
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@stacksofplates said in Chrome Browser in Ubuntu 17.04:
@travisdh1 said in Chrome Browser in Ubuntu 17.04:
@Lakshmana said in Chrome Browser in Ubuntu 17.04:
@scottalanmiller Full DVD means all iso in the ubuntu page?
After a quick glance at the alternate downloads for Ubuntu, it doesn't appear that they have an "Everything DVD" like Debian provides.
Ya you would probably have to make a local repo for everything. Never done it on Ubuntu, but it's relatively easy with RHEL.
That's what I thought too and probably the best possible approach to keep an offline Linux system updated. It's not even specific to Debian or Ubuntu, you can basically do the same with Windows (e.g. WSUS).
This should get you started:
https://help.ubuntu.com/community/AptGet/Offline/Repository
https://help.ubuntu.com/community/Repositories/Personal
http://askubuntu.com/questions/170348/how-to-create-a-local-apt-repository
http://linoxide.com/ubuntu-how-to/setup-local-repository-ubuntu/PS: Follow one tutorial and adapt information from the other links later on, if required.
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@thwr said in Chrome Browser in Ubuntu 17.04:
@stacksofplates said in Chrome Browser in Ubuntu 17.04:
@travisdh1 said in Chrome Browser in Ubuntu 17.04:
@Lakshmana said in Chrome Browser in Ubuntu 17.04:
@scottalanmiller Full DVD means all iso in the ubuntu page?
After a quick glance at the alternate downloads for Ubuntu, it doesn't appear that they have an "Everything DVD" like Debian provides.
Ya you would probably have to make a local repo for everything. Never done it on Ubuntu, but it's relatively easy with RHEL.
That's what I thought too and probably the best possible approach to keep an offline Linux system updated. It's not even specific to Debian or Ubuntu, you can basically do the same with Windows (e.g. WSUS).
This should get you started:
https://help.ubuntu.com/community/AptGet/Offline/Repository
https://help.ubuntu.com/community/Repositories/Personal
http://askubuntu.com/questions/170348/how-to-create-a-local-apt-repository
http://linoxide.com/ubuntu-how-to/setup-local-repository-ubuntu/PS: Follow one tutorial and adapt information from the other links later on, if required.
Ya I that with all of our RHEL systems. Yum gives you a reposync tool, so I just reposync the repos I'm attached to and store them on an apache server. It's really easy.
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I was going to go with a Spacewalk server, but since I'm using Puppet for CM, the complexities of Spacewalk wasn't worth it just for the repos.
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@stacksofplates said in Chrome Browser in Ubuntu 17.04:
I was going to go with a Spacewalk server, but since I'm using Puppet for CM, the complexities of Spacewalk wasn't worth it just for the repos.
I used Spacewalk one place for everything and honestly, I hate it. Way too much work, way too little results
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@scottalanmiller said in Chrome Browser in Ubuntu 17.04:
@stacksofplates said in Chrome Browser in Ubuntu 17.04:
I was going to go with a Spacewalk server, but since I'm using Puppet for CM, the complexities of Spacewalk wasn't worth it just for the repos.
I used Spacewalk one place for everything and honestly, I hate it. Way too much work, way too little results
I had an instance built and was playing with it. That's the impression I got. It's easier to drop a .repo file in and just use Apache to serve the files. Esp since I'm using Puppet.
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@stacksofplates said in Chrome Browser in Ubuntu 17.04:
@scottalanmiller said in Chrome Browser in Ubuntu 17.04:
@stacksofplates said in Chrome Browser in Ubuntu 17.04:
I was going to go with a Spacewalk server, but since I'm using Puppet for CM, the complexities of Spacewalk wasn't worth it just for the repos.
I used Spacewalk one place for everything and honestly, I hate it. Way too much work, way too little results
I had an instance built and was playing with it. That's the impression I got. It's easier to drop a .repo file in and just use Apache to serve the files. Esp since I'm using Puppet.
Yeah, Spacewalk feels like it is solving a problem that doesn't really exist. Scratching something that doesn't itch.
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@scottalanmiller said in Chrome Browser in Ubuntu 17.04:
@stacksofplates said in Chrome Browser in Ubuntu 17.04:
@scottalanmiller said in Chrome Browser in Ubuntu 17.04:
@stacksofplates said in Chrome Browser in Ubuntu 17.04:
I was going to go with a Spacewalk server, but since I'm using Puppet for CM, the complexities of Spacewalk wasn't worth it just for the repos.
I used Spacewalk one place for everything and honestly, I hate it. Way too much work, way too little results
I had an instance built and was playing with it. That's the impression I got. It's easier to drop a .repo file in and just use Apache to serve the files. Esp since I'm using Puppet.
Yeah, Spacewalk feels like it is solving a problem that doesn't really exist. Scratching something that doesn't itch.
I haven't used Satellite, so I don't know what's actually different, but it's expensive so I figured it was useful ha. I think it's just for admins who want to be able to point and click.
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@stacksofplates said in Chrome Browser in Ubuntu 17.04:
@scottalanmiller said in Chrome Browser in Ubuntu 17.04:
@stacksofplates said in Chrome Browser in Ubuntu 17.04:
@scottalanmiller said in Chrome Browser in Ubuntu 17.04:
@stacksofplates said in Chrome Browser in Ubuntu 17.04:
I was going to go with a Spacewalk server, but since I'm using Puppet for CM, the complexities of Spacewalk wasn't worth it just for the repos.
I used Spacewalk one place for everything and honestly, I hate it. Way too much work, way too little results
I had an instance built and was playing with it. That's the impression I got. It's easier to drop a .repo file in and just use Apache to serve the files. Esp since I'm using Puppet.
Yeah, Spacewalk feels like it is solving a problem that doesn't really exist. Scratching something that doesn't itch.
I haven't used Satellite, so I don't know what's actually different, but it's expensive so I figured it was useful ha. I think it's just for admins who want to be able to point and click.
It didn't feel that way. There was SO much effort involved in everything. Such a pain. Maybe it is part of that "GUI at any cost" mentality. But it was crazy to me.
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@scottalanmiller said in Chrome Browser in Ubuntu 17.04:
@stacksofplates said in Chrome Browser in Ubuntu 17.04:
@scottalanmiller said in Chrome Browser in Ubuntu 17.04:
@stacksofplates said in Chrome Browser in Ubuntu 17.04:
@scottalanmiller said in Chrome Browser in Ubuntu 17.04:
@stacksofplates said in Chrome Browser in Ubuntu 17.04:
I was going to go with a Spacewalk server, but since I'm using Puppet for CM, the complexities of Spacewalk wasn't worth it just for the repos.
I used Spacewalk one place for everything and honestly, I hate it. Way too much work, way too little results
I had an instance built and was playing with it. That's the impression I got. It's easier to drop a .repo file in and just use Apache to serve the files. Esp since I'm using Puppet.
Yeah, Spacewalk feels like it is solving a problem that doesn't really exist. Scratching something that doesn't itch.
I haven't used Satellite, so I don't know what's actually different, but it's expensive so I figured it was useful ha. I think it's just for admins who want to be able to point and click.
It didn't feel that way. There was SO much effort involved in everything. Such a pain. Maybe it is part of that "GUI at any cost" mentality. But it was crazy to me.
Right, I was thinking have the guys who know what's going on set it up and then have the "lesser" admins point and click, but even stupid tasks were hard. Stuff was in weird places and just not intuitive. Plus CM on it was slow.
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@stacksofplates said in Chrome Browser in Ubuntu 17.04:
@scottalanmiller said in Chrome Browser in Ubuntu 17.04:
@stacksofplates said in Chrome Browser in Ubuntu 17.04:
@scottalanmiller said in Chrome Browser in Ubuntu 17.04:
@stacksofplates said in Chrome Browser in Ubuntu 17.04:
@scottalanmiller said in Chrome Browser in Ubuntu 17.04:
@stacksofplates said in Chrome Browser in Ubuntu 17.04:
I was going to go with a Spacewalk server, but since I'm using Puppet for CM, the complexities of Spacewalk wasn't worth it just for the repos.
I used Spacewalk one place for everything and honestly, I hate it. Way too much work, way too little results
I had an instance built and was playing with it. That's the impression I got. It's easier to drop a .repo file in and just use Apache to serve the files. Esp since I'm using Puppet.
Yeah, Spacewalk feels like it is solving a problem that doesn't really exist. Scratching something that doesn't itch.
I haven't used Satellite, so I don't know what's actually different, but it's expensive so I figured it was useful ha. I think it's just for admins who want to be able to point and click.
It didn't feel that way. There was SO much effort involved in everything. Such a pain. Maybe it is part of that "GUI at any cost" mentality. But it was crazy to me.
Right, I was thinking have the guys who know what's going on set it up and then have the "lesser" admins point and click, but even stupid tasks were hard. Stuff was in weird places and just not intuitive. Plus CM on it was slow.
Yeah, I'm not sure many "lesser" admins would be happy using Spacewalk. Way too hard.
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@scottalanmiller said in Chrome Browser in Ubuntu 17.04:
@stacksofplates said in Chrome Browser in Ubuntu 17.04:
@scottalanmiller said in Chrome Browser in Ubuntu 17.04:
@stacksofplates said in Chrome Browser in Ubuntu 17.04:
@scottalanmiller said in Chrome Browser in Ubuntu 17.04:
@stacksofplates said in Chrome Browser in Ubuntu 17.04:
@scottalanmiller said in Chrome Browser in Ubuntu 17.04:
@stacksofplates said in Chrome Browser in Ubuntu 17.04:
I was going to go with a Spacewalk server, but since I'm using Puppet for CM, the complexities of Spacewalk wasn't worth it just for the repos.
I used Spacewalk one place for everything and honestly, I hate it. Way too much work, way too little results
I had an instance built and was playing with it. That's the impression I got. It's easier to drop a .repo file in and just use Apache to serve the files. Esp since I'm using Puppet.
Yeah, Spacewalk feels like it is solving a problem that doesn't really exist. Scratching something that doesn't itch.
I haven't used Satellite, so I don't know what's actually different, but it's expensive so I figured it was useful ha. I think it's just for admins who want to be able to point and click.
It didn't feel that way. There was SO much effort involved in everything. Such a pain. Maybe it is part of that "GUI at any cost" mentality. But it was crazy to me.
Right, I was thinking have the guys who know what's going on set it up and then have the "lesser" admins point and click, but even stupid tasks were hard. Stuff was in weird places and just not intuitive. Plus CM on it was slow.
Yeah, I'm not sure many "lesser" admins would be happy using Spacewalk. Way too hard.
haha, I didn't know a good term to use.
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@black3dynamite said in Chrome Browser in Ubuntu 17.04:
Installing Google Chrome automatically add the Google repo. So no worries about huge attack surface and it's kept up to date.
Good to know, I did not know that the deb package added that for you.