Pacman Curl Error - What's wrong?

Hi members!
What does this error message mean?
I want to do some audio recording with my 10.2 system. If possible I’ll wait for 11.3 to upgrade my dial-up Pentium.
Using Yast2 SW management the install download stops at the same spot as it does with Zypper. Glame is the app I wanted. Audacity installed fine. I already have Lame.
This is the Zypper error message:
frankk[2296] sudo zypper install glame
root’s password:
Restoring system sources…
Parsing metadata for 20070421-050535…
Parsing metadata for 20070829-221542…
Parsing metadata for 20070829-205037…
Parsing RPM database…
Summary:
<install> [S3:0][package]glame-2.0.2rc1-42.pm.2.i586
Continue? [y/n] y
Downloading: [S3:0][package]glame-2.0.2rc1-42.pm.2.i586, 573.1 K(1.9 M unpacked)
Please insert media [Curl error for: http://ftp.uni-erlangen.de/pub/mirrors/packman/suse/10.2/i586/glame-2.0.2rc1-42.pm.2.i586.rpm: Error code: Unrecognized error Error message: transfer closed with 146618 bytes remaining to read
] # 0. Retry [y/n]:
n
terminate called after throwing an instance of ‘zypp::Exception’
what(): Can’t provide ./i586/glame-2.0.2rc1-42.pm.2.i586.rpm from Index of /pub/mirrors/packman/suse/10.2/
[1] 10626 abort sudo zypper install glame
frankk[2297]
TIA Frank K

It’s having a problem finding the files, that’s why you are getting the error.
If you go to the ftp site, you could download the files and manually install them. (http://ftp.uni-erlangen.de/pub/mirrors/packman/suse/10.2/i586/glame-2.0.2rc1-42.pm.2.i586.rpm)
The url you have is adding a ‘:’ to the end of the filename/url.
10.2 is getting to the end of it’s life and 10.3 is the only current version that is supported. If you want to stay with 10.x for now, why not upgrade to 10.3? If I remember, there weren’t major problems with the upgrade.

Thank you for your response, whych,
I will try the ftp link. I’m still not sure if Audacity will work with lame or if it needs glame. The Audacity install tried to install glame.
Upgrading to 10.3 concerns me because of the download volume required of my dial-up connection.
In the past I have bought new releases on DVDs. Is there documentation available on the process to upgrade from 10.2 to 10.3?
Frank K

If you download the network install cd, it installs over the network and only downloads what you need/select for your installation.

Thank you whych,
Is the network install cd in a repository? a Dial-up connection often breaks during a long online session.

A follow-up question from your previous response deals with the … in the ftp link. I made it to the i586 dir with all the 10.2 rpms…

While connected, I saw glame scroll by in response to an ls. ls gl* didn’t get me a smaller list. Can you give me the 10.2 glame filename or a command line command I can run under ftp to get the glame filename displayed in my terminal?

TIA Frank K

The file name is: glame-2.0.2rc1-42.pm.2.i586.rpm.

The network install cd is in: Index of /distribution/10.3/iso/cd
You want one of the mini .iso files. You can also get the live cd and use that to install.
The install uses the opensuse repo.

Thanks again whych,
I got glame installed and downloaded this iso from the index:
openSUSE-10.3-GM-i386-mini.iso 04-Oct-2007 11:46 73M Mirrors Metalink
I’m expecting I have to burn the downloaded file onto an iso cd and boot off of it for the 10.3 update.
k3b gave me the growisofs Vs 6 error. Packman gave me another curl error when I tried to update dvd+rw… to Vs 7.
For what it’s worth, I found command line completion works on the ftp server. ls dvd “tab key” produces a filtered list of dvd files that fit into the terminal window.
Now dvd+rw… Vs 7 is installed.
Please let me know if I’m not on the right track!
Frank K

whych, list,
I know this thread is drifting off the multimedia topic.

I came up with a catch-22 situation with the dial-up network install. Let me know if I should move this post.

If not, there isn’t a network (modem) connection present during the boot from the 10.3 mini-iso cd.

Will he 10.3 mini-iso cd open the 10.2 modem connection or can I somehow boot to 10.2 and switch to 10.3?

Frank K

OK, try looking at this page:
Installation - openSUSE
If you still have a problem, post a new thread in the install/help section.

whych, the answer to my 10.3 upgrade may be on the URL you gave, but I can use some more help in guiding my way thru the choices. None of the examples I saw deal with a dial-up modem. Thanks again for you help with the curl error!
List, thank you for your indulgence on this off-topic development. I’ll move my upgrade pursuit as whych suggested.
Frank K

I will look and see if I can find a more definitive answer on setting up a dial-up modem for install, but as a quick work around can you not use internet connection sharing with the dial-up modem on a different computer?
(I haven’t used dial-up for years so I’m a bit rusty).
Perhaps posting a new thread in the install section will bring quicker results.

Thanks again for your response, whych,
On the install forum, Knurpht warned me that 10.3 will be long dead before 11.3 happens.
I do have a Pentium 3 here with 10.2 and a working modem. It’s motherboard has network card built in as does my Pentium 4.
I’ve never attempted to network it with my Pentium 4 across the room. I’ll look around for a LAN cable just in case.
Now getting back to Knurpht, I have a complete 11.0 DVD that I installed on a friend’s computer. It seemed a little rough to me. Knurpht seems to think the Vs 11 installer is superior to the Vs 10.
Knurpht didn’t get to the point of the modem install.
Whych, what do you think of a modem network upgrade from 11.0 to 11.1? I would probably stick with KDE3 until I move to 11.3.
Is it fair for me to have two threads posted on the same subject?
Frank K

I do have a Pentium 3 here with 10.2 and a working modem. It’s motherboard has network card built in as does my Pentium 4.
I’ve never attempted to network it with my Pentium 4 across the room. I’ll look around for a LAN cable just in case.
Now getting back to Knurpht, I have a complete 11.0 DVD that I installed on a friend’s computer. It seemed a little rough to me. Knurpht seems to think the Vs 11 installer is superior to the Vs 10.
Knurpht didn’t get to the point of the modem install.

I understand your position, but I think I’d rather find a way to upgrade and find alternative internet connectivity (even if via hardware modem). Modem support has generally decreased with recent linux releases, as outlined linmodems. I would try to determine your modem chipset via scanModem tool, as explained here. You can post any useful output here.

This may also provide some info (if you’re lucky):

/usr/sbin/hwinfo --modem

heboland
Since you say you have installed 11 on a friend’s pc, I would rather use this dvd and install 11 on your machine and when 11.2 is released I would rather get a magazine or dvd for the upgrade, either from a magazine or one of the cheap cd shops on the internet.
No matter what release you use, the network install will take a long time using dial-up and you will be stuck with the same catch 22 modem problems.
As you have already said, support for 10.3 ends soon.

Personally, I would use a modem install only if I had ablsolutely no other choice, and plenty of time. Once installed, modem updates may take a while, are probably acceptable.
I remember from my dial-up days that just downloading a cd would probably take a day or two, so a dvd would take days.

whych, the modem is all that’s available in my local except for satellite systems. Like you stated, even a small download can take hours. The 10.3 mini-iso took five hours!
Your suggestion of installing the 11.0 from my DVD seems a good next step. That will get me supported SW until 11.2 or 11.3 comes along.
Regarding /usr/sbin/hwinfo --modem, the command is doing something, but nothing is left in the terminal. I can pursue that farther on my own.
Frank K

http://forums.opensuse.org/announcements/422684-now-shipping-free-opensuse-dvds.html

(And that is certainly not the only online shop shipping cheap installation media.)

Akoellh,
Thanks for the link! I’m a little suspicious about getting something for “nothing”. On-Disk did offer a check/mailorder option which I took this time only.
If this is on the level (which I think is) they will ship me an openSuse 11.1 install DVD for about $2.07 for surface delivery.
I’m not in a hurry for this DVD.
For anyone else interested, On-Disk will ship OS DVDs from several distros for postage only.
They also claim to have access to other OS media.
If my order works, I won’t know until my check clears, but I’m confident tonight!
Frank K