These instructions come from http://askubuntu.com/questions/170348/how-to-make-my-own-local-repository with slight modifications. == Overview of Steps == 1. Install dpkg-dev. 1. Put the packages in a directory. 1. Create a script that will scan the packages and create a file apt-get update can read. 1. Add a line to your sources.list pointing at your repository. == Install dpkg-dev == Type in a terminal sudo apt-get install dpkg-dev The Directory Create a directory where you will keep your packages. For this example, we'll use /usr/local/mydebs. sudo mkdir -p /usr/local/mydebs Now move your packages into the directory you've just created. Previously downloaded Packages are generally stored on your system in the /var/cache/apt/archives directory. If you have installed apt-cacher you will have additional packages stored in its /packages directory. == The Script update-mydebs == It's a simple three liner: {{{ #! /bin/bash cd /usr/local/mydebs dpkg-scanpackages . /dev/null | gzip -9c > Packages.gz }}} Cut and paste the above into gedit, and save it as update-mydebs in ~/bin. (the tilde '~' means your home directory. If ~/bin does not exist, create it: Ubuntu will put that directory in your PATH. It's a good place to put personal scripts). Next, make the script executable: chmod u+x ~/bin/update-mydebs How the script works: dpkg-scanpackages looks at all the packages in mydebs, and the output is compressed and written to a file (Packages.gz) that apt-get update can read (see below for a reference that explains this in excruciating detail). /dev/null is an empty file; it is a substitute for an override file which holds some additional information about the packages, which in this case is not really needed. See deb-override(5) if you want to know about it. == Sources.list == add the line deb file:/usr/local/mydebs ./ to your /etc/apt/sources.list, and you're done. == CD Option == You can burn the directory containing the debs to a CD and use that as a repository as well (good for sharing between computers). To use the CD as a repository, simply run sudo apt-cdrom add == Using the Repository == Whenever you put a new deb in the mydebs directory, run sudo update-mydebs sudo apt-get update Now your local packages can be manipulated with Synaptic, aptitude and the apt commands: apt-get, apt-cache, etc. When you attempt to apt-get install, any dependencies will be resolved for you, as long as they can be met. Badly made packages will probably fail, but you won't have endured dpkg hell.