> The current strategy is as I see it: base, then update. > Can this be made a more complex tree? The reason for this is as follows: > The briQ is a PPC Open Firmware general industrial computer, which uses > basically the same kernel as Apples machines, but sometimes the kernel > misbehaves because the briQ has neither keyboard nor monitor. And > sometimes this is not adequately tested for by the kernel folks. > > What I need is YUM to say: check YDL-base, then YDL-update and then > Total Impact -update. make multiple repositories in a yum.conf and have them all in order. I think that's what you're describing. > Secondary - how do I build the YUM tree? More specifically - how do you > extract the headers. Yes - I noticed they are binary and not text so it > may be clipped from the rpm. man yum-arch. yum-arch is all there is to it - it's very simple. -sv