--- On Sat, 1/23/10, Marko Vojinovic <vvmarko@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > From: Marko Vojinovic <vvmarko@xxxxxxxxx> > Subject: Re: deltarpms and newer kernels > To: users@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx > Cc: "Antonio Olivares" <olivares14031@xxxxxxxxx> > Date: Saturday, January 23, 2010, 2:16 PM > On Saturday 23 January 2010 21:55:21 > Antonio Olivares wrote: > > Deltarpms does help a little bit with many packages, > but the kernel is not > > one of them :( > > > > kernel-devel, kernel-headers, kernel-firmware, etc do > work though, how come > > kernel package is not the same? > > Not sure if I understand it correctly, but anyway... The > kernel is not being > updated, but rather installed concurrently with other > kernels. So you cannot > create a delta rpm for it, since there is a completely new > rpm coming with > each kernel. If kernel was supposed to be *updated* then > maybe you could > create a delta, but if you want to *install* it (from > scratch, as is done in > Fedora), then delta will not help. This is where the OS's differ in their approach to kernel updating. > > And if you want to have multiple kernels available > simultaneously (in contrast > to SuSE), you need to *install* each of them, not update > from one to another. I wonder how OpenSUSE does this/did this, but there you don't download a new kernel, you download the delta rpm and magically the new kernel is created. Fedora *apparently does not have this*, but it is OK, I was just wondering why it does not happen here like in OpenSUSE? > > As for the presto and delta rpms, it typically saves 60-90% > of my bandwidth > with each update, and works flawlessly. Developers did a > fantastic job! :-) Can't disagree with this :) > > Best, :-) > Marko > > Best Regards. Antonio -- users mailing list users@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe: https://admin.fedoraproject.org/mailman/listinfo/users Guidelines: http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Communicate/MailingListGuidelines