I have a local repo of Centos, I'll like to used as part of my Internet Repos, so I wonder how can I do that
___________________________________ Atte. Alberto García Gómez M:.M:. Administrador de Redes/Webmaster Dirección Provincial de Educación. Matanzas, Cuba.
On Tue, Feb 16, 2010 at 03:22:43PM -0500, Alberto Garcia Gomez wrote:
I have a local repo of Centos, I'll like to used as part of my Internet Repos, so I wonder how can I do that
If you've rsync'd one of the standard mirrors then something like this... create a file /etc/yum.repos.d/mycentos.repo which has lines such as
[c5-local] name=CentOS-$releasever - Media baseurl=file:///RedHat/DVD/CentOS-5/ gpgcheck=1 gpgkey=file:///etc/pki/rpm-gpg/RPM-GPG-KEY-CentOS-5 protect=1 priority=1 enabled=1
[update-local] name=CentOS-$releasever - Updates local baseurl=file:///RedHat/updates/centos$releasever/$basearch/ gpgcheck=1 gpgkey=file:///etc/pki/rpm-gpg/RPM-GPG-KEY-CentOS-5 protect=1 priority=1 enabled=1
This will create two new repo's for yum to use; one looking at the DVD contents and one looking at the (rsync'd) updates folder.
In my case they're stored on an NFS server automounted at /RedHat. If you're doing this via a web server then just put in your http:// values.
If, instead, you're talking about creating your own package repository then look into something like "mrepo" to create the repository metadata and then create a yum.repos.d file to point to it.