On Thu, 2006-05-04 at 15:13 -0700, Roger wrote: > I have just installed FC4 on a new PC and ran yum update. The yum > update created 94 .rpmnew files. Most of these end with .conf.rpmnew > and the others end with /config/xxxxx.rpmnew. > > I understand these to be application configuration files that were not > installed by yum because there may have been local customizations. In > normal circumstances, I should review each .rpmnew file against its > counterpart and determine if if the configuration files can be swapped > by renaming or if the .rpmnew file must first be edited. However, at > least a few of the .rpmnew files seem to be binary and I do not know the > function of each application that has an .rpmnew file. > > Because this is a new installation (I have customized my monitor > settings and made a static IP address), a guess is that I just want all > the .rpmnew files installed -- and maybe the existing files renamed to > .rpmold just in case. Is there an installation option that I missed or > is there a cleanup script somewhere to deal with this problem? Would > use of smart (or apt) instead of yum have resulted in fewer problems? Are you by any chance using x86_64 and are many of these files associated with packages that you have both .x86_64 and .i386 versions installed? A common cause of spurious .rpmnew file generation is when multiple packages own the same config file (as is the case described above, and also for example /etc/vimrc). Paul. -- fedora-list mailing list fedora-list@xxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe: https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-list