On Tue, 2009-05-26 at 09:31 +0800, John Summerfield wrote: > If those dependencies are not met, it's unlikely to work at all. > Properly built, an rpm will specify those dependencies and ensure that > they are met. Correct. Remember, we're kickstarting many systems here. So we do want the original poster to recognize the value in doing it proper. On Tue, 2009-05-26 at 00:02 -0500, Mike Jennings wrote: > I believe dags repo has everything you need for astericks. You'll just > need to add his repo into your kickstart file then put astericks in > the packages list. > Dag.wieers.com. As I recall. I would _never_ recommend directly tapping a 3rd party repository in a network, and especially not a corporate one using kickstarts. I would at least create an internal repository of the 3rd party repository. That will greatly reduce Internet bandwidth requirements, as well as control what versions you are upgrading to (I won't common on DAG's release model). This should also be done for official Fedora releases itself as well. More anal -- i.e., this is what I have always done in my professional career -- I would selectively rebuild RPMs into my own repository. As an independent consultant prior, it meant I wasn't liable for redistribution of possibly questionable licensed packages. I don't think asterisk itself is one, but one has to be careful with some of the codec and other options. I'd fetch the software and build from SPEC file on-site at the customer, and only at the customer's request. I.e., the liability is on the customer, not myself. If I'm merely redistributing 3rd party packages, then there could be other liabilities on myself, especially now given who I work for. Just considerations, both technical and legal. -- Bryan J Smith Senior Consultant Red Hat GPS SE US mailto:bjs@xxxxxxxxxx +1 (407) 489-7013 (Mobile) mailto:b.j.smith@xxxxxxxx (non-RH/ext to Blackberry) -------------------------------------------------------- You already know Red Hat as the entity dedicated to 100% no-IP-strings-attached, community software development. But do you know where CIOs rate Red Hat versus other software and services firms for their own, direct needs? It's no comparison: http://www.redhat.com/promo/vendor/ _______________________________________________ Kickstart-list mailing list Kickstart-list@xxxxxxxxxx https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/kickstart-list