At home, I use it to keep several machines up to date. I let it cron at night across the dialup. For installs, I point it at a local repository of the cd's so I don't have to mess with dependencies. At work (Bank One), we use it as part of our install scripts and our last step before turning boxes over to production. Changes to production boxes are not applied with yum due to change control procedures. On 22 Oct 2003, Jeff Sheltren wrote: > We (being the CS department at UC Santa Barbara) are using yum to keep > 100+ RedHat machines updated. We have a local yum repository including > several group repositories so that we can have certain packages > installed on certain types of hosts. > > yum configs and yum anacron files are pushed out using cfengine so that > each machine 'group' has an appropriate 'groupupdate' being run by > anacron. > > I also use yum when I need to install an RPM. I'll just add it to one > of the repositories, and that way I don't need to worry about if I have > all the dependencies or not. > > (Also I use it to keep my home machine patched by connecting to our work > repository) :) > > -Jeff > > On Wed, 2003-10-22 at 14:21, seth vidal wrote: > > 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. :) > > > > > > -sv > > _______________________________________________ > Yum mailing list > Yum@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx > https://lists.dulug.duke.edu/mailman/listinfo/yum > ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Jim Wildman, CISSP, RHCE jim@xxxxxxxxxxxxx http://www.rossberry.com