to Habitual, LQ Addict.
You say keyring will not fix this. Can anything fix it? Other than allowing internet to automatically adjust my system.
to sundialsvcs, LQ Guru.
Thank you, that is a good opinion. Slightly outdated, or stale, is ok with me. And to be more updated, I simply get a new official debian repository dvd set.
Quote:
Search the vendor's support site for a trouble-ticket referencing it.
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That sounds like a good way to find the answer. I assume you mean the place where I get the dvd set from. And I also guess that the product is always the same, no matter who the dvd vendor is. They are all made from the iso file on the debian website.
to jamison20000e, Senior Member.
I do not understand. You say I should download a cd image, then install my system from that? But I like my current system. To fix the problem, is that what I need, a security update? I thought a new dvd set would have a security update. And I remember debian 6 had the same problem.
to 273, LQ Addict.
Is the computer connected to the internet or it it not?
Yes, the computer is connected to the internet.
If it is then you can just download the various updates.
When I want an update, I simply get an updated dvd set. I have done that many times.
If not then just choose not to have any internet mirror during install and forget about it.
But apt-get still says WARNING: The following packages cannot be authenticated!
If you did choose not to use an internet mirror during install then please elaborate on how exactly you are installing, which options you chose and the exact errors.
I installed my system from debian 8.5 dvd set, with internet off, when the dvd set was first released. That was a long time ago. But as I recall, I chose most of the default answers.
I think you are forgetting the title of this post. How to authenticate packages offline?