Hello!
Just or those beeing lazy like me, there's a small script, which
retrieves the latest kernel via http using wget [0].
You can use it after you read about the latest kernel [1].
In theory one could also use wget -c to and then put the script under
control of cron, but wget has no
'--do-not-say-something-if-file-is-already-there-and-complete' switch,
so it will always tell you that the file is already there.
Nico
[0]: http://linux.schottelius.org/scripts/#get-latest-kernel
[1]: http://lists.schottelius.org/kernel-announce.html
On Mon, 20 Mar 2006 20:08:22 +0100
Nico Schottelius <[email protected]> wrote:
> Hello!
>
> Just or those beeing lazy like me, there's a small script, which
> retrieves the latest kernel via http using wget [0].
>
> You can use it after you read about the latest kernel [1].
>
> In theory one could also use wget -c to and then put the script under
> control of cron, but wget has no
> '--do-not-say-something-if-file-is-already-there-and-complete' switch,
> so it will always tell you that the file is already there.
>
Never heard about ketchup?
http://www.selenic.com/ketchup/wiki/
:)
--
Paolo Ornati
Linux 2.6.16 on x86_64