Hi,
after setting up a local mirror of OpenBSD's packages and patches with rsync rather easily, I tried to find a way to do the same with FreeBSD. As How to Mirror FreeBSD states, this is intentionally not possible, at least not for the packages. Now I know I can build my own package server via poudriere, or Dragonfly's synth, and that there are scripts and descriptions for compiling the FreeBSD updates yourself, but I rather not. While I like being able to compile stuff myself, I very much dislike the "compile everything yourself"-notion (the reason I dislike Gentoo, and why it took me a long time to really get started with FreeBSD).
So my questions are:
- What is the reasoning behind this? "Due to very high requirements of bandwidth, storage and adminstration [...]" seems rather vague and unintuitive...
- Am I overlooking something? Are there ways to do this without having to compile everything myself?
Thanks!
(If a Mod thinks this might be better moved to a different subforum, go ahead. This seemed the most fitting one)
after setting up a local mirror of OpenBSD's packages and patches with rsync rather easily, I tried to find a way to do the same with FreeBSD. As How to Mirror FreeBSD states, this is intentionally not possible, at least not for the packages. Now I know I can build my own package server via poudriere, or Dragonfly's synth, and that there are scripts and descriptions for compiling the FreeBSD updates yourself, but I rather not. While I like being able to compile stuff myself, I very much dislike the "compile everything yourself"-notion (the reason I dislike Gentoo, and why it took me a long time to really get started with FreeBSD).
So my questions are:
- What is the reasoning behind this? "Due to very high requirements of bandwidth, storage and adminstration [...]" seems rather vague and unintuitive...
- Am I overlooking something? Are there ways to do this without having to compile everything myself?
Thanks!
(If a Mod thinks this might be better moved to a different subforum, go ahead. This seemed the most fitting one)