Are there any Keryx offline repository manager alternatives for NetBSD?

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I want to install Xfce offline on another computer but I don't know. I searched in internet and found Keryx offline repository manager for Debian-based package
management but not NetBSD. I want to know are there any Keryx offline repository manager alternatives for NetBSD?







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  • See askubuntu.com/questions/974 for what the range of "Keryx alternatives" extends to in this question and how much leeway this gives for answers.
    – JdeBP
    Jun 6 at 7:45















up vote
0
down vote

favorite












I want to install Xfce offline on another computer but I don't know. I searched in internet and found Keryx offline repository manager for Debian-based package
management but not NetBSD. I want to know are there any Keryx offline repository manager alternatives for NetBSD?







share|improve this question





















  • See askubuntu.com/questions/974 for what the range of "Keryx alternatives" extends to in this question and how much leeway this gives for answers.
    – JdeBP
    Jun 6 at 7:45













up vote
0
down vote

favorite









up vote
0
down vote

favorite











I want to install Xfce offline on another computer but I don't know. I searched in internet and found Keryx offline repository manager for Debian-based package
management but not NetBSD. I want to know are there any Keryx offline repository manager alternatives for NetBSD?







share|improve this question













I want to install Xfce offline on another computer but I don't know. I searched in internet and found Keryx offline repository manager for Debian-based package
management but not NetBSD. I want to know are there any Keryx offline repository manager alternatives for NetBSD?









share|improve this question












share|improve this question




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edited Jun 6 at 19:12
























asked Jun 6 at 3:18









Denny00

1199




1199











  • See askubuntu.com/questions/974 for what the range of "Keryx alternatives" extends to in this question and how much leeway this gives for answers.
    – JdeBP
    Jun 6 at 7:45

















  • See askubuntu.com/questions/974 for what the range of "Keryx alternatives" extends to in this question and how much leeway this gives for answers.
    – JdeBP
    Jun 6 at 7:45
















See askubuntu.com/questions/974 for what the range of "Keryx alternatives" extends to in this question and how much leeway this gives for answers.
– JdeBP
Jun 6 at 7:45





See askubuntu.com/questions/974 for what the range of "Keryx alternatives" extends to in this question and how much leeway this gives for answers.
– JdeBP
Jun 6 at 7:45











1 Answer
1






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In case FreeBSD you can create repositories with pkg's repo subcommand (man pkg-repo) if you've a directory with packages (many *.txz). You can use this repository by creating /usr/local/etc/pkg/repos/own_repo.conf:



own_repo: 
url:"file:///path/to/yourpkg/",
mirror_type:NONE,
enabled:yes



Maybe it's worth to check poudriere to create your own packages from ports: it's automated build system to create package repositories.






share|improve this answer





















  • The "portable" (to APT and APT) and "cross-platform" (supporting Debian and Ubuntu) tool that the questioner is mentioning does the equivalent of pkg fetch --dependencies --output (with a user interface for selecting the packages) to a removable storage device on the first system with the Internet connection and then installing from that on the second system with no such connectivity. You might want to write an answer that does that.
    – JdeBP
    Jun 6 at 7:41










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1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes








1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes








up vote
0
down vote













In case FreeBSD you can create repositories with pkg's repo subcommand (man pkg-repo) if you've a directory with packages (many *.txz). You can use this repository by creating /usr/local/etc/pkg/repos/own_repo.conf:



own_repo: 
url:"file:///path/to/yourpkg/",
mirror_type:NONE,
enabled:yes



Maybe it's worth to check poudriere to create your own packages from ports: it's automated build system to create package repositories.






share|improve this answer





















  • The "portable" (to APT and APT) and "cross-platform" (supporting Debian and Ubuntu) tool that the questioner is mentioning does the equivalent of pkg fetch --dependencies --output (with a user interface for selecting the packages) to a removable storage device on the first system with the Internet connection and then installing from that on the second system with no such connectivity. You might want to write an answer that does that.
    – JdeBP
    Jun 6 at 7:41














up vote
0
down vote













In case FreeBSD you can create repositories with pkg's repo subcommand (man pkg-repo) if you've a directory with packages (many *.txz). You can use this repository by creating /usr/local/etc/pkg/repos/own_repo.conf:



own_repo: 
url:"file:///path/to/yourpkg/",
mirror_type:NONE,
enabled:yes



Maybe it's worth to check poudriere to create your own packages from ports: it's automated build system to create package repositories.






share|improve this answer





















  • The "portable" (to APT and APT) and "cross-platform" (supporting Debian and Ubuntu) tool that the questioner is mentioning does the equivalent of pkg fetch --dependencies --output (with a user interface for selecting the packages) to a removable storage device on the first system with the Internet connection and then installing from that on the second system with no such connectivity. You might want to write an answer that does that.
    – JdeBP
    Jun 6 at 7:41












up vote
0
down vote










up vote
0
down vote









In case FreeBSD you can create repositories with pkg's repo subcommand (man pkg-repo) if you've a directory with packages (many *.txz). You can use this repository by creating /usr/local/etc/pkg/repos/own_repo.conf:



own_repo: 
url:"file:///path/to/yourpkg/",
mirror_type:NONE,
enabled:yes



Maybe it's worth to check poudriere to create your own packages from ports: it's automated build system to create package repositories.






share|improve this answer













In case FreeBSD you can create repositories with pkg's repo subcommand (man pkg-repo) if you've a directory with packages (many *.txz). You can use this repository by creating /usr/local/etc/pkg/repos/own_repo.conf:



own_repo: 
url:"file:///path/to/yourpkg/",
mirror_type:NONE,
enabled:yes



Maybe it's worth to check poudriere to create your own packages from ports: it's automated build system to create package repositories.







share|improve this answer













share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer











answered Jun 6 at 4:47









uzsolt

1,342613




1,342613











  • The "portable" (to APT and APT) and "cross-platform" (supporting Debian and Ubuntu) tool that the questioner is mentioning does the equivalent of pkg fetch --dependencies --output (with a user interface for selecting the packages) to a removable storage device on the first system with the Internet connection and then installing from that on the second system with no such connectivity. You might want to write an answer that does that.
    – JdeBP
    Jun 6 at 7:41
















  • The "portable" (to APT and APT) and "cross-platform" (supporting Debian and Ubuntu) tool that the questioner is mentioning does the equivalent of pkg fetch --dependencies --output (with a user interface for selecting the packages) to a removable storage device on the first system with the Internet connection and then installing from that on the second system with no such connectivity. You might want to write an answer that does that.
    – JdeBP
    Jun 6 at 7:41















The "portable" (to APT and APT) and "cross-platform" (supporting Debian and Ubuntu) tool that the questioner is mentioning does the equivalent of pkg fetch --dependencies --output (with a user interface for selecting the packages) to a removable storage device on the first system with the Internet connection and then installing from that on the second system with no such connectivity. You might want to write an answer that does that.
– JdeBP
Jun 6 at 7:41




The "portable" (to APT and APT) and "cross-platform" (supporting Debian and Ubuntu) tool that the questioner is mentioning does the equivalent of pkg fetch --dependencies --output (with a user interface for selecting the packages) to a removable storage device on the first system with the Internet connection and then installing from that on the second system with no such connectivity. You might want to write an answer that does that.
– JdeBP
Jun 6 at 7:41












 

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