>From my searching, most of these have been discussed before (several times) or have had various bugzillas I think, but I was just wondering if someone could sum up any overall action to clean up the situation. 1. "yum install foo" installs both foo.i386 and foo.x86_64. I know this has been hashed out before and declared "not a bug", but does anyone actually like the way this is working? Yes, there is a good reason for it but the common case on x86_64 seems to be a misfeature. 2. If yum updates some package that has a *new* dependency that the old version did not have, yum will install both arch versions of the depended-upon package (see above). When that happens with just one lib, it can by chain-reaction drag in about half of a whole i386 package set. Whee. neato. 3. If you have 2 arches of a package installed, and you "rpm -e" the i386 version, any shared files (docs, etc) get removed. Makes it hard to clean up from either of the above 2. Surely there has to be a better way, I don't want two versions of every darn thing installed on my machine, it is a waste. Has someone looked into fixing #3 so we can clean up things? Is there a plan in the works? Thanks, -Edwin -- Edwin Huffstutler edwinh@xxxxxxxxxxxx -- fedora-list mailing list fedora-list@xxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe: https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-list