Am 08. Aug, 2017 schwätzte Mark Phillips so:
moin moin Mark,
Thanks for the idea. I took the easy way out - I commented out the line in
That's essentially the same thing :).
I do like how yum has --disable-repo, which simplifies the whole thing.
The price debian pays for having more
Yeah maybe you're right. There is no stretch dist either, so maybe wheezy
is the last version they will support over apt (if it works at all)
On Tue, Aug 8, 2017 at 7:25 PM, Mark Phillips
wrote:
> Brien,
>
> Thanks for checking that out. I will play around with the
Brien,
Thanks for checking that out. I will play around with the KeepSolid repos
after they get back to me.
I think they may not use repos anymore, as these instructions (
https://www.vpnunlimitedapp.com/en/info/manuals/linux) just have people
download the .deb and install it when there is an
You might have to uninstall and reinstall the client if they changed the
package names around and stuff. . .
On Tue, Aug 8, 2017 at 6:54 PM, Brien Dieterle wrote:
> Actually it looks like it is. Just change your apt line to:
>
>
Actually it looks like it is. Just change your apt line to:
http://apt.keepsolid.com/debian/dists/wheezy/InRelease
On Tue, Aug 8, 2017 at 6:52 PM, Brien Dieterle wrote:
> Simplex Solutions looks like it was bought by KeepSolid
>
> Their client is now downloadable here:
Simplex Solutions looks like it was bought by KeepSolid
Their client is now downloadable here:
https://www.vpnunlimitedapp.com/en/downloads/linux
The link itself goes here:
http://apt.keepsolid.com/debian/pool/main/v/vpn-unlimited/vpn-unlimited_4.1_amd64.deb
So maybe apt.keepsolid.com is the
der.hans
Thanks for the idea. I took the easy way out - I commented out the line in
the file for this repository and then ran apt-get update and it worked with
no errors. When I hear back from simplex solutions that they have fixed
their repository, I will un-comment the line.
Thanks!
Mark
On
Am 08. Aug, 2017 schwätzte Mark Phillips so:
moin moin Mark,
if the simplexsolutions repo is in its own file, then you can ignore it
for updates. Admittedly, this is one of the few things that's actually
easier with yum.
Here's what I use to get only security updates. You can certainly do