I don't know much and I'm still muddling through Casper.
I'm still waiting to implement a user interactive software update policy for mobile users forcing them to run updates which reboot their machines...
In the meantime, I have the JavaForMacOSX10.6.Update16.dmg to manually roll out to our 10.6.8 machines with Casper.
My issue is that a good number of the laptops I need to push to are remote with various network connections and uptime.
From what little I know a .dmg is best in these conditions as it can be resumed where a .pkg cannot.
Is there any way to repackage the .pkg into a .dmg for better update stability?
If not, and I push the update via .pkg and the update is interrupted because of network or user instability, will clients eventually get updated or will interrupted updates cause further issues I don't want to deal with?
Thanks for any assistance.
Solved
Packaging a legit .pkg as a .dmg
Best answer by mm2270
Actually if you're using http(s) for your distribution points, you get resumable downloads, no matter the format of the file, I'm almost sure. You don't get resumable downloads with AFP/SMB shares though so if someone closes their lid in the middle of a file being pulled down, its hosed.
I would not try repackaging a .pkg into a .dmg personally. The only real way to do that would be to do a Composer snapshot and that adds extra headaches to worry about, like missing the postinstall/postflight scripts, extra junk getting picked up during the snapshot, etc.
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