On Thu, Aug 07, 2014 at 12:44:16AM +0200, Jakub Wilk wrote:
* David Kalnischkies da...@kalnischkies.de, 2014-07-26, 15:25:
You don't need to write your credentials in a sources.list anymore (which
should be world-readable) if your apt is recent enough (and with recent I
mean at least
On 2014-07-26 15:25:32, David Kalnischkies wrote:
Hi David,
That is surprising to see. It seems to be a slightly modified 6 years
old copy of apt's http method (with all its bugs of course) which just
got 2 years ago GPLv3(+) headers.
Taking above on board I decided to write whole S3
* David Kalnischkies da...@kalnischkies.de, 2014-07-26, 15:25:
You don't need to write your credentials in a sources.list anymore
(which should be world-readable) if your apt is recent enough (and with
recent I mean at least oldstable). You can populate a netrc-like file
at /etc/apt/auth.conf
On Fri, Jul 25, 2014 at 03:00:17PM +0100, Marcin Kulisz (kuLa) wrote:
* Package name: apt-transport-s3
Note that this is only 'needed' for private S3, apt came to terms with
public S3 desperate its problems (like pipelining and decoding of '+')
– which this copy doesn't support, but see next
Package: wnpp
Severity: wishlist
Owner: Marcin Kulisz (kuLa) deb...@kulisz.net
* Package name: apt-transport-s3
Version : 20120426090326git
Upstream Author : Kyle Shank kyle.sh...@gmail.com
* URL : https://github.com/kyleshank/apt-s3
* License : GPLv3
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