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458 lines
30 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 872
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Title: HPR0872: Packaging YUM
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr0872/hpr0872.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-08 03:54:30
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---
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Hello welcome to Hacker Public Radio, this is Clat 2 and today I'm going to go over
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some of my very favorite young commands.
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Yum is of course the yellow dog update manager or modified or something like that.
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He was this package managing front end to RPM that a distribution called yellow dog came
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up with.
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Yellow dog, you may or may not recognize the name now, used to be apparently sort of a big
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name on PlayStation and PowerPC Linux distributions.
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And anyway they were either based or inspired strongly by Fedora and so they came up with
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this little nice user friendly front end to the default package manager at the time
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called RPM.
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RPM I've used a little bit, but typically if you're using Fedora or Red Hat or CentOS or
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Scientific Linux or whatever, you're using Yum.
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So Yum is a very cool little command and I think that it's worth going over because at
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least in my mind, a package manager is only ever any good if you actually know what
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you're doing.
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This can be said of most applications if you think about it, I think I've possibly touched
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on this subject on my other show, but a new world order.
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It's worth saying here as well and that is that you can't really critique an application
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until you get to know it, which is totally backwards if you think about it.
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I mean, if you don't like an application, the last thing in the world you want to do
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is get to know it.
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And yet at the same time, that's the only way you can really critique it.
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That's the only way you can say anything about it because otherwise you're just firing
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blanks.
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You're just shooting in the dark.
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You're just coming up with complaints and the minute they're out of your mouth someone
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says, well, actually, it's really easy to do that.
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You just do yum dash capital C and it does that.
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So what are you talking about?
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And you're like, I don't know what I'm talking about because you don't.
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You don't know what you're talking about.
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So this is how I am with app to get.
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Every time I complain about app to get in IRC, I know and I usually try to state after
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I have made my obligatory complaint that I'm only complaining because I'm not reading
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the manual.
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I didn't sit down and read up on how to do some fancy little task for which no one should
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ever be doing.
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Especially if I'm ripping out some kind of package from the default devian install to put
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in my own, some modified version of that from a different repository, you don't do that
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sort of thing without reading up on how to do it.
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And then you go and do it without reading up on doing it and it messes up and then you
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complain about it.
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Well, that's why.
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So yum is the package manager that I kind of know, I mean, aside from like Slack builds.
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The yum is the one that I use quite frequently on Fedora and now actually even on Red Hat.
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So that's the one that I started looking into to really get to know and learn.
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So I thought I'd go over some of my favorite commands within yum and then hopefully maybe
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possibly someone will come out with an episode about their favorite apt-get commands or
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their favorite, what is it, Pac-Man or AUR or whatever arch Linux uses all that stuff.
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It would be really good, I think, in educational for us all to listen and share and learn.
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So anyway, yum.
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You have to run it as root or mostly you have to run it as root because obviously you're
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messing around with your system applications and stuff like that.
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So it does expect you to have root power at least.
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I just run it as root.
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So if you do an SU and into your root password and you can get into yum, one of my favorite
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features of yum.
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This has been one of my favorite features for a very long time and I don't actually know
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a really, honestly, any package manager that has this feature other than yum.
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But again, it's probably simply because of my ignorance on the subjects.
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But the feature that I'm speaking of is the group suite or the group functions of yum and
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I'll tell you all about them.
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So first of all, yum is a command with a bunch of sub-commands.
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It's sort of a software suite if you will.
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I think of it like I think of Git, for instance, or public in where you say, Git, check out
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such and such a file or git push or git remove or git add or git commit.
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It's Git is the sort of like, OK, I'm going to give you a git command and then you say
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the git command.
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And then sometimes you say some kind of argument thereafter.
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So yum is a lot like that.
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You'll be saying you'll be typing in yum and then you will give some kind of command after
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that and then maybe you'll give some kind of argument after those.
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So the first one that I usually start with after a fresh install of Fedora is always
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the group stuff.
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So I do yum group list, all one group list is one word.
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So it's yum space group list and you'll probably want to pipe that through less because
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what that does is give you a full listing of these groups that I don't really know who,
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maybe the Fedora community, maybe the Red Hat people, I'm not really sure who comes up
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with these groups but there is a set of groups and each of those groups contains a number
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of software titles that if you do a yum group install, such and such a group, then you
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get all of these software applications installed for free by which I mean without really having
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to think about it.
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This is completely unlike me to like this feature, right, I'm a slack or a user.
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I state that I want full control over my system.
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Well on Fedora, I don't really care, the reason that one might sit down in front of Fedora
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is because it's a very sort of desktop-y fast paced kind of distribution, so you're updating
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a lot, you're reinstalling or upgrading to the latest version of it a lot, you're doing
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all these cutting edge things.
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So if I'm doing a fresh install of Fedora, the last thing I want to do is go through
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my system and carefully and delicately design every single application and every font and
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everything that goes into it, I don't care.
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So this is a really, really handy tool actually and 9x out of 10, I'm perfectly happy, actually
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so far 10x out of 10, I'm perfectly happy with what I get in these group installs.
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So sample groups would be for instance, there's the KDE software compilation, KDE
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space software space compilation, that's actually not one I usually install because I usually
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install the KDE version of Fedora anyway, but another one would be text-based internet
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for instance, window space managers, x software development, system tools, sound and video,
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various slash productivity, network space servers, mySQL database, obvious sort of really
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common groups of really commonly installed software packages, probably if you're going
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to, for instance, install mySQL database, you can probably already think of other things
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that you're going to install along with it, right?
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You're not just going to do my SQL server, you're going to do mySQL client, mySQL admin
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or maybe that comes with server, I don't really remember, PHP my admin, come on, you
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know you're going to do it, all kinds of little things like that.
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So rather than doing a young install, mySQL dash database, mySQL dash client, all these other
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things that you know you're going to do every single time, just do a young space group
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install and then you'll have to escape it because there's a space in the name.
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MySQL space database, close quote, and hit return, and that sure enough installs the group
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mySQL database.
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Well, what if you don't know what's in that group you want to know before you install it?
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That's understandable.
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So that would be young space group info and then again quote mySQL space database in quote.
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And that looks at the metadata about that group of packages and lists exactly what's
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in the group of mySQL database.
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And sure enough, it's got all the usual or a bunch of the usual things that you're going
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to get along with mySQL, mySQL dash Python, some lib dbd things that are probably for web
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servers, mySQL server, Perl, dbd, mySQL, mod off mySQL, so some Apache modules, PHP, my
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SQL, Q3, mySQL, Q3, mySQL, lots of different things.
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And actually PHP, my admin is not installed on that.
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That's probably comes along with web server group, I don't know.
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But the point is that you've got a bunch of packages all grouped together in something
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that's very logical and for 90% of the users out there, it's probably either exactly
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what you wanted or it's really, really close.
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So if we do a young group info on sound, space and video, I can bet you anything that it's
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not exactly how I would install the sound and video stuff that I would want on a system,
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but it's probably really, really close and sure enough, it is really, really close.
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It's got all the different codecs, it's got VLC, it's got a couple of sound making applications,
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like Rose Garden, it's got a bunch of myth stuff that I would never in real life
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install, but you take the good with the bad or the stuff that you're not going to use
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with the stuff that you are going to use, and you can whittle it down and really get
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in there and be very, very, you know, actually tell it which one to install and which one
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not to install, but I don't ever really do that, to be honest.
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So that's the group suite, group list, group info and group install that will get you set
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up with a really nice system with essentially one command, because what I usually do is
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I do it just a group, a young group install, and then I list all the different groups that
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I want to install, you might have to do like a group list first just to remember what
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groups there are, so that's two commands, but then the next one is going to be young group
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install, and then you just list all the different groups that you want to install with quotation
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marks around them if they have funky characters or spaces in their name, and then you're done.
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The only other young group command there is of course is group remove, which removes
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the group.
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I actually have never used that command because I'm always so happy with the groups that
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I install.
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So another really important command that I learned pretty quickly was young what provides,
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and again that's all one word.
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I think that either since I learned that one, or maybe it was already like this and I just
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didn't learn it like this, there is a young provides.
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This is really handy when you're looking for a package or an application and you don't
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know what package it gets contained in.
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I used to have this problem a lot with things like GCC or G++ on different distributions.
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I get it on Fedora now because of the group install, I do a group install of the software
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development stuff.
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It grabs all of the GCC, all the different compilers and different development files and
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stuff like that, the header files, whatever.
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So I don't really have to deal with that now.
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And even if I did, I think I would understand well enough that G++ was basically a version
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of GCC that's going to come along with the GCC package in Fedora.
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But I didn't know that at one time, so young provides would have helped me with that.
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More recently I was looking for JRE, which is a Java runtime environment.
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I really don't know that much about Java to be honest.
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So I knew that it was, I mean, I knew JRE was Java.
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I didn't know what it was going to be called.
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I didn't know what to really look for.
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And I typed in like a yum search JRE.
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And it came up with like JRE factory and JRE factory Java doc.
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No idea what a JRE factory is.
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I don't know if that's what I want.
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I'm pretty sure it's not, it turns out yum provides JRE does a full listing of anything
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with the JRE flag set on it or the keyword of JRE associated with it.
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And it turns out that you can get the Java 1.6 OpenJDK, which happens to be an OpenJDK runtime
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environment, aka JRE.
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Or you can get the 1.5 version or you can get the something else G's CJ, I don't know.
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The point is that you find the four packages in the repository or the many repositories that
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I've got on this box right there, you know, where at least what to look into, see what
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you need.
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And of course that leads me right into yum info.
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So if we saw that we've got an interesting looking package, we're not really too sure
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if it's what we're looking for or not.
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We can copy the name from our yum provides and then do a yum space info space name of
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that package.
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And it tells me exactly what that package does.
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And it tells me in the description that it is the OpenJDK runtime environment, okay granted
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that's actually not much more than what the name of the package tells me.
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But obviously in other packages, it's a lot more informative and more interesting and
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more complex.
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So there you go.
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Yum provides yum info.
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Yum list is also really great.
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Yum list is basically everything that you've got on your system already installed.
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So if you can't remember what exactly you've installed lately or where you got it from,
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like what repository you got it from, yum list will give you all of that information and
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I do mean all of that information.
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There might be another place to look for this information on the system.
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I actually don't know.
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I think of this in my mind as doing an L.S. on slash, slash, slash log, slash packages
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in, in Slackware tells you exactly what packages have been installed, what files are in those
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packet, you know, got installed along with those packages, stuff like that.
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This is very, very similar.
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If you're going to do a yum list, you're either going to want to pipe it through.
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Grab if you're looking for something very specific where you're going to want to pipe it or
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rather redirect it into a text file so that you can search it later on because it will
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tell you everything.
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But the nice thing that it does tell you is it tells you what the package is called, what
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version number you have installed and what repository it comes from.
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So already just kind of scanning through the results of my yum list.
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I see Fedora.
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Fedora.
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I see updates.
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I see RPM Fusion free, RPM Fusion free, updates, RPM Fusion non-free.
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That was a XV, I'm not really sure what that is, something graphical, but I don't really
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remember doing that, but whatever.
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But this is really great.
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Obviously, if you're looking to kind of get a feel for what you've done to your system,
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what you've got on it, what you don't have on it, whatever yum list is, is what gives
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you that kind of information.
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Okay.
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So speaking of installing stuff from other repositories, one thing that you do sometimes
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is you install an RPM that you got from some other website outside of your repository.
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This used to be called a local install.
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They've deprecated the turn local install, now it's just install, so it's yum install,
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some package.
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The difference would be that you've got an RPM that you found online, you downloaded
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the RPM itself, and you want to install it on the command line for whatever reason.
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Now in real life, if you go out onto the inner webs and you find an RPM from a reliable
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source, I typically only am doing this if I'm going to a website that, you know, the
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actual application's website, I don't go to one of these sites that sort of collects
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all the RPMs or just offers random RPM from random people.
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But for instance, animation package that I really like called Synfig Studio.
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When it comes out with a new version, I want that new version right now, so I very often
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go over to their site, Synfig Studio.org or Synfig.org, and I go to the downloads and
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I find the latest version that they've got and they package it up for RPM as an RPM.
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So I grab the RPM, actually there's three RPMs, if I'm remembering correctly, I might
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be misremembering and thinking of the source code packages, which I frequently use on the
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Slackware builds.
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But for Fedora, there's either a package or three packages that you have to install, grab
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those or that, and then you can do a yum local install.
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I use the term local install still out of habit, although I've read in the man page of
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yum that is actually deprecated, it's just yum, well not deprecated, it's still supported
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just for legacy purposes, but you're not supposed to use it.
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So yum install and then dot slash the name of that package sitting on your hard drive.
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Simple enough, like I say, in real life, if you did that, if you downloaded it, when you
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start downloading it, something's going to catch you and say, hey, this is an RPM, would
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you like to open this in your package manager and install it there?
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I never do that because I think way back in the early days of doing this stuff, I had
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a couple of experiences where I just wouldn't install it correctly or whatever.
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And I just kind of fell out of the habit of using a graphical package manager.
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So I typically am just doing it on the command line.
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So if you do a yum install dot slash sinfig-0.6 or whatever, dash no arch, let's say,
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rpm, then it's going to warn you that it doesn't want to install that package because
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it doesn't have any signature or any GPG key record for that package, meaning that that
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package has no recognizable digital signature.
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The reason that Fedora and other distributions use digital signatures are so that there's
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a level of familiarity between you and your source of applications.
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So if you are grabbing packages from a server and you have previously imported a certificate
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or a signature key file into your system, then your package manager is going to look
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at your certificate, the GPG key that you imported into its database.
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And it's going to check that against the package that you are now trying to install.
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And if there's a mismatch, then obviously something's wrong.
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Why would there be a mismatch?
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Well, because that's not the package you think it is or someone hacked into the repository,
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which of course has happened.
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So having that GPG key from that server on your computer in your RPM database is really,
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really important.
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But if you're installing something that has no GPG key signature like Synfig, then you
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can't very well, for instance, import their GPG key into your database and then install
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the package because they just don't offer that or if they do, maybe you don't know about
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it yet.
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I don't think they offer it though.
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But the workaround would be no GPG check and then hit return and that would work.
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So the full command would be yum install, dash, dash, no GPG check, space.slash, Synfig,
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risk, RPM, return.
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And that would successfully install that application and it is, of course, skipping the GPG key check.
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So it's not going to complain about how it's completely insecure and untrusted and you
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should never do that.
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And you really shouldn't ever do that.
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I mean, in theory, because you're bypassing a security check that is built in to make
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sure that you're getting the package that you believe you're getting.
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The RPM distributor at least has some kind of MD5 sum or something so that you can
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verify that yes, okay, this package is what I think it is.
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But you obviously do want to make sure that it's coming from a trusted source because
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you really don't have any way of knowing what that source is unless you've gone to that
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repository before, you've imported their GPG key and then you're able to work with their
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packages in a secure way.
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The GPG key importing process is fairly invisible to you usually.
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I mean, certainly the ones, you know, the default repositories that kind of are associated
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with Fedora from a fresh install, well, those GPG keys are there.
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They are imported because they're preset in your system.
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That's the repository that is added to your system by default.
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But if you go to a place, for instance, like RPMfusion.org, RPMfusion.org is the official
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unofficial repository for all of those packages that Fedora cannot or does not want to carry
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themselves.
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But they're from pretty well established sources.
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Everyone seems to be pretty okay with RPMfusion.
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Everyone kind of knows the people behind it.
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It's some of the most reliable and trusted old places that used to have the extra stuff
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for Fedora and they've all come together into one big place called RPMfusion.
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And if you go there, you can get packages for Fedora and even Rell or Sintos or whatever,
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although I have to say that they don't really have that many packages for Rell.
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But Fedora, they do have quite a few for that and so when you're importing it or when
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you're adding their repository to your list, rather, and there's a really easy way to
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do it.
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There's a configuration page and you simply go in, grab a prebuilt command that they give
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you, paste it into your terminal and it runs and installs, grabs the RPM that is basically
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the setting for that repository and adds it to your system.
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And of course, along with that, it's importing their own GPG key into your database so that
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your system is familiar with RPMfusion packages and will not throw errors unless there's
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some reason to believe that the signatures aren't matching and that there's some problem,
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which you should probably not ignore.
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But if it's a local install, you're not going to have the GPG key imported into your database
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so you need to skip over it with dash dash, no GPG check.
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The other thing that you need to do because now you've done a local install of some package.
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So you have basically overridden the normal method of tracking a package.
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Normally, Yum wants to own your packages.
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It wants to be able to look at that package, it wants to look at the version number and
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it wants to compare it with whatever is on the in one of your repositories.
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So if Sinfig does exist, for instance, in the Fedora Extras repository, like RPMfusion
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or something, and it's the older version, let's say it's 0.5, I'm making up these version
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numbers.
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I think I'm in the ballpark, but I could be wrong about them.
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But let's say it's 0.5, the new version is 0.6, it's going to compare those two and if
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you've just installed 0.6 manually and Yum sees 0.5 on the repository, its job is to make
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those two version numbers match.
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So it's going to obviously try to actually downgrade you from 0.6 to 0.5 and that would
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be an issue for you probably.
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So you need to blacklist the Sinfig package that you have installed yourself.
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So you need to take ownership of that on your own and resolve that, yes, you know that
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it is a newer version than what is available online, but that you are going to keep it updated
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or just kind of manage it yourself.
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The way to take ownership of a package would be to enter it as an exclude in your Yum.conf.
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Yum.conf lives in slash Etsy, not surprisingly.
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And so if we again, we're just hanging out as root in this episode, hope you don't mind.
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Do a Vim space slash Etsy slash Yum.conf.
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And it's a pretty simple conf file to be honest, it kind of has some really obvious stuff
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location of the log file, the GPG check, whether it's going to do it or not, simple stuff
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like that.
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This isn't where the repositories are usually listed.
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That's in a different folder slash Etsy slash Yum.repos.d, but it is the correct place for
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the excludes.
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So all you have to do to exclude something is add a line at the bottom of your conf file
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where at the bottom of the active portion of it, the bottom of it is a bunch of commentary.
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So I usually avoid that, but right under for instance, install underscore or install
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only underscore limit equals three, which I don't even know what that means.
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I type in exclude equals and then the name of the package.
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So sinfig and actually I'm just going to go ahead and do a wild card RPM.
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So if it's a sinfig, something RPM, exclude that from being managed by Yum.
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And I might also do that for ffimpeg if I've compiled my own ffimpeg, which wouldn't
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|
surprise me space.
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It's just a space, the limited list of all the packages that you do not want Yum to
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|
manage for you.
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Now, you can actually override your own excludes interestingly.
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|
So if you know that there's an exciting new version of sinfig out and yes, it's in the
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|
fedora 16 repository or fedora 18, whatever you're upgrading to, or you just decide that
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|
you're tired of dealing with the burden of managing some package and you decide that
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|
you want Yum to go ahead and do an update.
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|
And if there's new stuff, even in your excludes, then go for it.
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Then you can do a Yum update dash dash or you know, Yum, well, yeah, I guess it would
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|
be update really or it could be distribution dash synchronization if you're doing a huge
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|
upgrade kind of thing.
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|
But point being, Yum update space dash dash disable excludes, oh, that's one word, equals
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in this case all because I haven't defined which repository, you know, I haven't gone
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|
into each repository and said, okay, I want you to exclude this package from this repository
|
|
stuff like that, which you can do in the Yum repo directory, but we're not doing that.
|
|
So, and I don't really actually do that myself.
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|
So I just say disable excludes equals all and then it goes through the typical Yum update
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|
process or upgrade process, whatever I'm doing, update, whatever.
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|
And it ignores the excludes that I've delineated.
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|
In real life, I think I've done this once.
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|
Usually if I exclude something, I really want it excluded.
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|
One of the commands or sub commands that I use quite frequently actually is Yum Deplist.
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|
Yum Deplist in my mind is just hugely helpful because I'm always cheating on Slackware
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|
and grabbing RPMs from Fedora.
|
|
So if I'm from the Fedora repository, so if I look at a Fedora RPM on Fedora and I do
|
|
like a Yum Deplist space, whatever, in this case, let's just go ahead and do public in because
|
|
that's the one that I've been dealing with lately and I'll pipe that through less because
|
|
it's a long list, then it shows you all of the, it shows you the package, which package
|
|
is talking about, in this case, public in dot no arch 2.5-2FC15, tells you every single
|
|
dependency that that package relies upon.
|
|
So if you are doing something like what I do where you're stealing RPMs shamelessly
|
|
from the Fedora repositories, Deplist is great because it tells you exactly what you're
|
|
going to need in order to get the thing to actually install on your system wherever
|
|
you're installing it.
|
|
In my case, it would be Slackware via the RPM to TGZ command.
|
|
So Deplist is hugely helpful, not really all that important if you're just doing it on
|
|
Fedora because Yum is going to resolve all those dependencies for you anyway.
|
|
A couple of things great for automation would be the Assume Yes flag, that's dash dash
|
|
assume yes, all one word, that obviously assumes yes to any question that Yum might be prompted
|
|
to ask you.
|
|
And then there's the dash dash skip dash broken, which skips any packages with problems
|
|
that, if there's a problem with like resolving a dependency or something, it'll just skip
|
|
that package rather than tell you that it can't install anymore and quit.
|
|
So those are two good ones for those times that you're not doing a group install or maybe
|
|
you are and you're going to walk away from the system.
|
|
You know, you've got this big chunk of stuff that you're going to install, you're going
|
|
to walk away, go to bed, get up in the morning and have a nice new system.
|
|
The thing to do there would be to have those flags turned on probably unless you want
|
|
it to stop after like the first package that has one little problem with it.
|
|
There are other commands for Yum.
|
|
There are a couple of more, I've actually covered a lot of them.
|
|
There are still more.
|
|
I don't use them so I'm not going to go into them now and pretend like I know what they
|
|
do.
|
|
I'm going to read you the Yum help results and just kind of give you a one sentence summary
|
|
but that's silly.
|
|
So those are the commands that I know and love.
|
|
Those are the ones that I have either used in a memorable situation or use all the time.
|
|
One cool one is kind of that I kind of play around with, sometimes as Yum Shell.
|
|
Not that big of a deal really, it just drops you down to a prompt where you can then
|
|
not type in Yum Space, group install or whatever.
|
|
You just type in just the command.
|
|
So if you want a Yum list, you just type in List because you're in the Yum Shell already.
|
|
So that's kind of fun I guess to play around with, not that big of a deal, but just so
|
|
you know that is there.
|
|
Other than that, that's Yum.
|
|
That's the big front end for RPM.
|
|
It's a, like I say, it's pretty user friendly.
|
|
It's quite forgiving, even in things like capitalization, sometimes in the group, the
|
|
group installs, you can miss a couple of capitals and it won't break, it doesn't care.
|
|
So it's easy to use.
|
|
It's fun to use and it's effective.
|
|
I probably should mention Yum remove and Yum erase those, as far as I know are the same
|
|
thing I could be wrong, erase might be a lot more complete than remove.
|
|
I use Yum remove.
|
|
So if you want to remove a package that you've installed or that has been installed along
|
|
with a group, for instance, a group install that you didn't really want, you can always
|
|
do a Yum remove name of that package and that will remove it after your confirmation.
|
|
So that's it.
|
|
That's Yum.
|
|
Hope you enjoy it.
|
|
Be sure that if you're going to do Fedora, you obviously want to do a Yum update pretty
|
|
early on after installing because of the pace of the development.
|
|
And you'd also want to go over to rpmfusion.org and add those repositories probably because
|
|
that has a lot more packages and a lot of cool stuff in there.
|
|
So hope that helps you if you use Yum and aren't really too clear on some of the functionality
|
|
of it and hope it interests you if you've never used it and have been curious.
|
|
Thanks for listening.
|
|
Bye.
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|
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