Hello again, On Sun, Aug 17, 2008 at 4:48 PM, Michael 'Mickey' Lauer <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > You could inspect /etc/ipkg.conf and browse with a HTTP browser to get > absolute URIs.
Are you referring to /etc/opkg.conf? Ther is no /etc/ipkg.conf on my system, and /etc/opkg.conf contains: [EMAIL PROTECTED]:~# more /etc/opkg.conf # Must have one or more source entries of the form: # # src <src-name> <source-url> # # and one or more destination entries of the form: # # dest <dest-name> <target-path> # # where <src-name> and <dest-names> are identifiers that # should match [a-zA-Z0-9._-]+, <source-url> should be a # URL that points to a directory containing a Familiar # Packages file, and <target-path> should be a directory # that exists on the target system. # Proxy Support #option http_proxy http://proxy.tld:3128 #option ftp_proxy http://proxy.tld:3128 #option proxy_username <username> #option proxy_password <password> # Offline mode (for use in constructing flash images offline) #option offline_root target dest root / lists_dir ext /var/lib/opkg which doesn't seem all that useful to me. Are you suggesting that I should manually check all feeds in the files in /etc/opkg ? Well, I would like the tools I use (opkg or others) to help me avoid such manual work as much as possible. Obviously, opkg knows where to download a package from, why can't it tell me the URI? Anyway, I had a look at http://people.openmoko.org/~zecke/om2008.8-testing/ but it seems there are only 1973 kernels there. -- Regards, Torfinn Ingolfsen _______________________________________________ Openmoko community mailing list [email protected] http://lists.openmoko.org/mailman/listinfo/community

