This is the one.
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
Seems like old Ubuntu repositories are gone
Collapse
X
-
http://releases.ubuntu.com says:
For old releases, see old-releases.ubuntu.com
Here's were I found the solution and some backgrounds:
Hey guys. I know it's had support dropped, but I still have a computer running hoary. Yesterday I tried to run apt-get update and got 404 errors. I thought the end of support meant they just wouldn't release new updates. Does it also mean that the repository for hoary is gone, too? Or is this just a tempoary problem?
So happy upgrading! :-) (I also need the old repositories sometimes)
EDIT:
In your /etc/apt/sources.list the syntax for the old-releases repository is a little different. I guess it must be "old-releases.ubuntu.com/releases/ ..." So if adding this repository won't work url syntax is maybe a little different. Couldn't test it because at the moment there are only Windows PCs around me. *help* ;-)
Leave a comment:
-
Originally posted by damion4242 View PostIt's not as simple as that.
I just tried Ubuntu this week, because my old hd died, so I had to restore data from backups anyway, and they were handing out free Ubuntu disks at school.
Unfortunately, the disks turned out to be Breezy.
Now, I don't mind upgrading, but according to here, you need the breezy repositories to do so.
I don't mind the lack of updates, but taking down the repositories makes upgrading unnecessarily difficult.
Breezy doesn't seem to recognize my cd-burner, so that's not an option.
Any ideas on how to get upgrade done?
or download a mini netinstall disk.
you could also try to replace sources.list entries with new ones and just apt-get update and install update-manager
speaking of which, doesn't launching
sudo update-manager -c
offer you upgrade to new release?Last edited by yoshi314; 13 July 2007, 03:57 AM.
Leave a comment:
-
It's not as simple as that.
I just tried Ubuntu this week, because my old hd died, so I had to restore data from backups anyway, and they were handing out free Ubuntu disks at school.
Unfortunately, the disks turned out to be Breezy.
Now, I don't mind upgrading, but according to here, you need the breezy repositories to do so.
I don't mind the lack of updates, but taking down the repositories makes upgrading unnecessarily difficult.
Breezy doesn't seem to recognize my cd-burner, so that's not an option.
Any ideas on how to get upgrade done?
Leave a comment:
-
Thanks a lot Ubuntu. Thanks for handicapping my personal computing.
that's life. you have stay upgraded to keep up with security fixes.
didn't feel like making a rant, and i hope i don't offend anyone by saying this.
Leave a comment:
-
According to this article - http://www.howtoforge.com/dvd_images...u_repositories - an ubuntu repository is around 30 GB large. It's not as simple as just making an ISO file and releasing it, and that's a lot of space to continue hosting an old repository for the few people still using Breezy.
You may already know about this site, but it contains package information for Breezy - http://packages.ubuntu.com/breezy/. If there's something you need to install, you can find the name of the .deb file for that package. Then, google for the .deb and download it off one of the mirrors that comes up. Alternatively, one of those mirrors is probably a repository you can use for ubuntu to replace the official ones that are no longer up.
Leave a comment:
-
If I were Ubuntu and I would be pulling down repositories, I'd rather put up some of them as a downloadable iso like an add-on iso where people can download and then toss their repositories to hell. Ubuntu still hosts their older Ubuntu isos, and if they don't want to host old repositories, I would want to give these people a good avenue to use their Ubuntu system instead of crippling people and forcing them to upgrade. Linux is about choice. I chose Breezy.
LTS would have been the choice, but if you read my post earlier, I did not know Ubuntu would tear down repositories.
Furthermore, I installed Breezy when it was new.
Leave a comment:
-
While I can understand the inconvenience, I do have an honest question for you. How long should a Linux distro provide server space/mirrors for unsupported releases?
I know that you said you have no desire or intention to update your release, but really if you don't want to update your system on a frequent basis maybe you should just stick to the Ubuntu LTS releases or choose a different distro that has a much longer support cycle.
Leave a comment:
-
Yes. I know what that would entail. And frankly, I don't demand Ubuntu to update versions and bug fix old Ubuntu distributions. If they withdraw support, that's fine. But by pulling down repositories, they cripple those Ubuntu distributions. IT IS NOT FUNNY WHEN SOMEBODY PULLS STUNTS LIKE THIS ON YOUR OS INSTALLATION!Last edited by niniendowarrior; 19 June 2007, 12:00 AM.
Leave a comment:
-
From what I've read there are still some repo mirrors available that have breezy and other distro packages available. Using these mirrors would require you to edit your repository file, but if insist on running an old unsupported distro such as that then chances are you'll have to know how to do much more anyway... that is if you want to keep up bug fixes or anything else.
Leave a comment:
Leave a comment: