BackupPC 3 is in the backports on ubuntu 6.06+  and is in the standard
archive in gutsy

On 10/25/07, Rob Owens <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> Debian Lenny has BackupPC 3.0 in its repositories.
> -Rob
>
> N.Pussini wrote:
> > Ok man! I'll follow your suggestion.
> >
> > Just one thing: I've tried /apt-get install backuppc  /from ubuntu.
> > I saw that version of backuppc is 2.0.2-7.
> >
> > It's possible? Is somewhere a newer  "packaged" backuppc? Maybe for
> Debian?
> >
> > Maybe you are talking about other backuppc package?
> >
> > Thank you
> >
> >
> >
> > Carl Wilhelm Soderstrom ha scritto:
> >> On 10/24 11:44 , N.Pussini wrote:
> >>
> >>> I've installed a Ubuntu Server 6.06 and followed all the instructions
> in
> >>> order to install all the prerequisites (mod_perl, apache ecc ecc).
> >>>
> >> I'm guessing you installed from the tarball rather than the package.
> >> Install the package, and it should install everything with all the
> correct
> >> permissions, get the other packages you need, and may even give you
> some
> >> examples to work from (the Debian package gives you an example
> localhost.pl
> >> file that's very helpful the first time).
> >>
> >> Always install software from packages rather than tarballs.
> >> - it makes it trivial to find out if you need to update anything
> >> - it means you don't need a compiler on your system (a tool than an
> attacker
> >>   can use against you)
> >> - it makes it easy to roll back to an older version if need be
> >> - it makes it easy to remove software you don't need anymore (which
> reduces
> >>   the tools an attacker can use against you, and reduces upgrade
> workload)
> >> - it makes it easy to find out what version of the software is
> installed
> >> - with some package managers (RPM) it's easy to find out when the
> software
> >>   was installed, so you can correlate that to something breaking
> >> - you can find out who built the software, so you can go complain to
> them
> >>   when their package breaks
> >> - you save lots of time by not compiling everything on every host
> >> - you have a consistent install because it's the same code everywhere
> and
> >>   not compiled on each machine separately
> >>
> >>
> >
> >
> >
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>
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