On Friday 14 September 2007 18:56, Antonio Montagnani wrote: > Todd Zullinger ha scritto / said the following il giorno/on > > 14/09/2007 16:46: > > Ed Kasky wrote: > >>> Recently yum changed its configuration in this regard. You willl > >>> find the equivalent of : > >>> tokeep > >>> in the /etc/yum.conf file in aline like this: > >>> installonly_limit=8 > >> > >> What version was that? I am running 3.0.6 and the tokeep is still > >> in /etc/yum/pluginconf.d/installonlyn.conf > > > > yum >= 3.2.2 (so it doesn't apply to FC6) > > and shall I leave the /etc/yum/pluginconf.d/ in the updated system?? and > what about the skip-broken.conf file??? > > -- > Antonio You can safely delete the file in /etc/yum/pluginconfig.d, that I believe you recreated when you saw that, that file after the updates was an rpm.new, and the original file was gone. The skip-broken.conf file no doubt has to do with the file that you recreated, and should no longer exist. Deleting the file you recreated should get of this complaint. I use Apt which keeps all kernels as default, but if you want to do the same with Yum, you can set the installonly_limit line in /etc/yum.conf as. installonly_limit=0 Apparently this disables it, and all kernels are kept. Nigel. -- fedora-list mailing list fedora-list@xxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe: https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-list