Re: How to permanently disable default config files

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You can use yum-plugin-post-transaction-actions to delete the files (not currently available in CentOS 8 though):
Create a file named /etc/yum/post-actions/httpd.action
With the content:
httpd*:update:rm -f /etc/httpd/conf.d/file_to_delete

You should also be able to leave the files empty instead of deleting them - yum should leave the modified files alone.

- Y

Sent from a device with a very small keyboard and hyperactive autocorrect.

On Wed, Jun 10, 2020, 5:29 PM Scott A. Wozny <sawozny@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
Running the Centos7 packaged httpd, I didn't want the config files in /etc/httpd/conf.d (autoindex.conf, userdir.conf and welcome.conf) to load.  I thought I was being clever and renamed them all to name.disable so they there there for my reference, but wouldn't load the modules and settings. 

Then I did a yum update to httpd.  The disable files were still there, but the installer replaced the "missing" .conf file which kept my instance from loading (I have disabled modules necessary for some of the config lines in these conf files).

Is there a "standard" way to remove files so a yum update install doesn't replace them?  I have "comment out all the lines in the conf files and leave them in place" as a fallback, but I was wondering if I'm missing the "correct" way to do this.  I can't imagine I'm the only person who doesn't want those files to load on a default install.

Thanks for any suggestions you may have,

Scott

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