On Wed, Oct 22, 2003 at 02:28:50PM -0700, Garrick Staples alleged: > On Wed, Oct 22, 2003 at 05:21:50PM -0400, seth vidal alleged: > > On Wed, 2003-10-22 at 10:38, Jeff Sheltren wrote: > > > Seth may have a better idea than anyone - but I'm not sure if he's ever > > > done any type of survey of yum users. Seth? :) > > > > > > Maybe it's just me, but I'd rather have a repository at home as well - > > > it's much better to have the packages download while I sleep and then > > > have them locally than having to wait while they download when I wanted > > > them five minutes ago... > > > > This list is horribly biased, I'm sure, but what the heck: > > > > Send messages regarding how you use yum. I did this a few months ago but > > that was before the 'fedora uses yum' stuff and all the fun that comes > > with that. :) > > Well, let's see. I use yum for updating and installing packages from my > own mirror/repo (mirrors.usc.edu/pub/yum-repository/{redhat,mandrake}), > and for handling my own packages (mirrors.usc.edu/pub/yum-repository/hpc > and polop.usc.edu/pub/rpms). I don't use any 3rd party repos like > fresh or at. Since everyone else is naming names... I'm using yum to install and maintain a 756 node research computing cluster at USC, www.usc.edu/hpcc/ and a few workstations here in the admin group. Yum is specifically used to install a base set of packages in a RH kickstart script, and to maintain updates. Since all machines maintain the exact same list of packages, I'm not using any of the fancy group support in yum. I repackage yum for myself, the only change being to disable the cronjob and adding my own config file.