Package: apt-proxy
Version: 1.9.35-0.3
Severity: wishlist

Hello.

I just finished rebuilding my system, which had been too many years 
between rebuilding.  Anyway, one thing I noticed in rebuilding, is that 
quite a few packages I had installed on the old system, still needed to 
be downloaded.  Silly with small files, time consuming with big ones.
Most of these were packages which are more or less stable and 
unchanging, such as dictionaries.  It would be nice if there was a 
minimum number of copies (default 1) that a person could configure, so 
it would delete old packages up to the point where there was only a 
single package left.

Anyway, it's a thought.

-- System Information:
Debian Release: lenny/sid
  APT prefers unstable
  APT policy: (500, 'unstable')
Architecture: i386 (i686)

Kernel: Linux 2.6.18-4-k7 (SMP w/2 CPU cores)
Locale: LANG=en_CA.UTF-8, LC_CTYPE=en_CA.UTF-8 (charmap=UTF-8)
Shell: /bin/sh linked to /bin/bash

Versions of packages apt-proxy depends on:
ii  adduser                       3.102      Add and remove users and groups
ii  bzip2                         1.0.3-6    high-quality block-sorting file co
ii  debconf [debconf-2.0]         1.5.13     Debian configuration management sy
ii  logrotate                     3.7.1-3    Log rotation utility
ii  python                        2.4.4-2    An interactive high-level object-o
ii  python-apt                    0.6.20     Python interface to libapt-pkg
ii  python-central                0.5.13-0.1 register and build utility for Pyt
ii  python-twisted-web            0.6.0-1    An HTTP protocol implementation to

apt-proxy recommends no packages.

-- debconf information:
  apt-proxy/upgrading-v2:
  apt-proxy/upgrading-v2-result:


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