From: Jakob U. <jak...@gm...> - 2010-04-29 10:40:34
|
Am 29/04/10 12:15, schrieb Chris Roberts: > On Thursday 29 Apr 2010, Wim De Geeter wrote: >> No we use nfs, >> >> But it is still really not clear to me when to use ltsp-update-image >> So I thought that every time you add some packages in the chroot you >> need to update your ltsp-update-image > > No, with Debian and NFS you never use this command, delete it from your mind. > > Indeed I think you probably need to remove the image it has created, which I > think is something like /opt/ltsp/images or something like that. > > Obviously I don't use ltsp-update-image, so I'm working from vague > recollection, but certainly I don't have /opt/ltsp/images on my system, so if > you do, then it probably should be removed. > > It would be good if someone who is more confident of their facts could > confirm. Yep, that's the chroot image. /opt/ltsp/images$ ls -lh total 350M -rwxr--r-- 1 root root 350M Feb 26 20:02 i386.img > > Careful not to remove your /opt/ltsp/i386 directory though! > > There must be a lot of Debian LTSP users diligently running this command, > could it not be modified to check for whether nfs/nbd is in use and politely > educate the user? > |