On Sun March 11 2007, Tony Nelson wrote: > >On 11/03/07, Till Maas <gmane.20.boeh@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > >> Dotan Cohen wrote: > >> > >> > >> > >> You can add "includepkgs= f-spot" or whatever the correct package name > >> to the rawhide configuration file to include only this package and maybe > >> add required dependencies. > > > >Oh yeah? That IS good to know. ... > > ... > > Yes, if you want your system to become a hybrid of rawhide and FC6, yeah, > you can do it. How do you feel about reinstalling from scratch, after your > system gets really strange? I'd say that's a bit extreme. Installing the occasional package from development doesn't create a hybrid of rawhide and FC6. It's like saying that installing the occasional package from source is creating a hybrid of Fedora Core and the Wild West. Dotan: Just go into /etc/yum.repos.d and find your fedora-development and fedora-development-extras repo files - edit them as root to enable them. Do a yum install of the package you want from rawhide, then re-edit the development repos to disable them. Better, use the yum enablerepo option (man yum). Even easier, if you use Yumex or Smart or Kyum, you can enable and disable repos with a couple of mouse-clicks, do a refresh of your package cache, and install your package - all the above will pull the package in from development along with any dependencies. Use proper caution - read your screens! If some package wants to update 50 other packages for dependency reasons, back off. With some basic common sense and due diligence, it's fairly easy to pull in packages from rawhide that you're particularly insterested in - there's always the possibility of issues with Fedora because of it's cutting edge, and you increase the probabilities by using rawhide, but trashing things so badly you have to re-install from scratch is not the bogeyman it's sometimes portrayed as - can it happen? yes - does it happen often? no, not if you practice common sense... What does happen is that people enable rawhide repos to install a package, and forget to disable them before running the next yum update - I've seen several posts over the past years about people doing this - I did it once, but, when the update pulled in 300+ packages to be updated and asked for confirmation, my red flag went up. Of course, if you run automatic yum updates with the no confirmation option turned on then walk on eggs.... -- Claude Jones Brunswick, MD, USA