[Yum] traceback encountered

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As long as we are talking about the first pass to get the headers.  I have
seen it just stop alot.  I installed yum on my system at home.  It has a
cable modem.  Yum would download a few headers and then stop.  I would
restart it and it would get a few more.  I resorted to getting them via
ncftp.

I was thinking that we might have to package up the headers as a rpm and
install it when we install yum.  This will thus seed the cache and yum
will then only have to get new headers.


-Connie Sieh
Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory

On Fri, 6 Sep 2002, Troy Dawson wrote:

> Robert G. Brown wrote:
> > On 6 Sep 2002, seth vidal wrote:
> >
> >
> >>of course it does. exception handling is easy - but you have to grab the
> >>exception first - I hadn't encountered it much/at all - I'd still like
> >>to more gracefully handle a broken header.
> >
> >
> > What you need is to put salt on the tail of a broken header or two; then
> > you could play with it until you could handle at least them.
> >
> > Alas I through my broken headers away (and I'd guess Troy did too).  I
> > therefore have no idea why they were broken in the first place or where
> > they were broken.  Next time I get an error like this, though, I'll try
> > to send you the contents of the header directory to debug with.
> >
> > I'd debug it myself, except that (as previously noted) I will learn
> > python only if somebody ties me to a table and threatens me with hot
> > irons.  Too many programming languages...
> >
> > Historically this (hot irons) happens every year or two (seems like) so
> > I'll probably be programming in it regularly by mid-2003...;-)
> >
> >    rgb
> >
> > Robert G. Brown	                       http://www.phy.duke.edu/~rgb/
> > Duke University Dept. of Physics, Box 90305
> > Durham, N.C. 27708-0305
> > Phone: 1-919-660-2567  Fax: 919-660-2525     email:rgb@xxxxxxxxxxxx
> >
> >
> >
> Now that I know what the problem is, I'm pretty sure I know how it happened.
> The user was running off a wireless card, and I was doing a yum update for the
> first time.  It was busy pulling down the header files when it just stopped, I
> believe because of a bad network connection or something.  I then killed yum,
> started it again, and away it went.  But evidently that header that it got
> stuck on much have been mangled.
> So maybe if you pull the network halfway through a header update, we can get a
> nice mangled header.
>
> Troy
>
> --
> __________________________________________________
> Troy Dawson  dawson@xxxxxxxx  (630)840-6468
> Fermilab  ComputingDivision/OSS  CSI Group
> __________________________________________________
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