Tim wrote: > Personally, I find the simple HTTP/FTP caching approach with Squid is > the simplest: You configure your yums, on all machines, to use just one > mirror, and to fetch through your proxy. Squid caches what you get. > And you only download, and cache, the packages that you actually use. You convinced me to start squid, but unfortunately after reading my trusty tutorial, <http://www.brennan.id.au/11-Squid_Web_Proxy.html>, and looking through /etc/squid/squid.conf , I decided the chances of my making a mistake, and cutting off my family from the internet, was too high to risk. I do realise that it would be good to run squid on my server, but as I said it seems a risky enterprise. Is it possible to use squid just for yum, say, as an experimental start? > Some of the local mirroring options involve blindly downloading every > update that's released. Whether, or not, you use that package. For me, > that'd be a huge waste of bandwidth and drive space. That was exactly what I felt about setting up a mirror, which as far as I could see meant mirroring the official repository. -- Timothy Murphy e-mail: gayleard /at/ eircom.net tel: +353-86-2336090, +353-1-2842366 s-mail: School of Mathematics, Trinity College, Dublin 2, Ireland -- fedora-list mailing list fedora-list@xxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe: https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-list Guidelines: http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Communicate/MailingListGuidelines