bumper
aptly
bumper | aptly | |
---|---|---|
1 | 17 | |
11 | 2,602 | |
- | 0.8% | |
5.7 | 9.6 | |
about 2 months ago | 4 days ago | |
Go | Go | |
MIT License | MIT License |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
bumper
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[OC] bumper - tool for quick automated bumping of $pkgver in AUR packages
Hi guys, some time ago I decided that bumping $pkgver every time I release a new version of one of my packages is pretty repetitive and boring. So I did what every sane dev would do: instead of doing it manually in 50 seconds I spent 50 hours writing a program which will do it for me: https://github.com/bcyran/bumper.
aptly
- What is an appropriate way to install debian packages in a completely air-gapped environment?
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About nautilus-typeahead
You should ask in the upstream bug tracker (is it this one? https://github.com/lubomir-brindza/nautilus-typeahead). First step is to get it to build for Debian manually/locally - i.e. patch the official nautilus Debian package. Then it's easy to setup a personal APT repository with aptly
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WSUS Alternative solution for Linux Systems
Exactly what aptly is for. No idea about CentOS side, for that we just had rsync from official repo + some scripts
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Zabbix in isolated environment
I'm not sure if this is an option, because it might break the isolation model, but you could setup repo mirrors in whatever tool of choice you like, but for Debian/Ubuntu, I think aptly is really featureful.
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How can I automate .deb GPG signing procedure?
I know that it is not directly what you asked about, but without knowing how the signed debs are being used, I can say that if you were to use aptly to create an apt repo to house your debs to then be installed on whatever machines offline (assuming network connectivity, which may be an incorrect assumption), it requires you to sign a published repo/mirror, and also requires you to install and trust the key on any systems that you then want to use to install package unless you specifically use [trusted=yes] in the apt repo list file.
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Are there any extra steps to creating a Debian repository mirror?
There's also Aptly but I've never used it. Looks neat, though.
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Archiving Debian ISO
I personally just mirror the packages for what ever I'm using with aptly and use the netinstall iso and point it to that local mirror. The netinstall iso will pull any needed updated from the repo.
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Linux Host Patch Management
Take a look at Aptly.
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Centralized patching for Ubuntu
Aptly is a purpose-built DEB content management solution. Never used but I've heard good things.
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Linux Package repo server
The last time I got involved in repo/package management, we used aptly Later moved to Jfrog artifactory. The latter is very expensive.There is also pulp some said it is good, which I personally never managed in production environment, so I can't recommend for or against.
What are some alternatives?
pacseek - A terminal user interface for searching and installing Arch Linux packages
apt-mirror - Official apt-mirror source.
thema - A CUE-based framework for portable, evolvable schema
refrapt - Tool to create local Debian mirrors using Python
CapsuleCD - Continuous Delivery for automating package releases (npm, cookbooks, gems, pip, jars, etc)
s5cmd - Parallel S3 and local filesystem execution tool.
yay - Yet another Yogurt - An AUR Helper written in Go
Moby - The Moby Project - a collaborative project for the container ecosystem to assemble container-based systems
lure - The community repository missing from your Linux distro
bosun - Time Series Alerting Framework
Go Metrics - Go port of Coda Hale's Metrics library
awsenv - AWS environment config loader