On Fri, Jul 20, 2012 at 03:48:43PM -0400, m.roth@xxxxxxxxx wrote: > around. I did a yum clean all, then yum --enablerepo=elrepo list FWIW, that probably didn't do what you thought. On my machine I have EPEL configured, but disabled. $ pwd /var/cache/yum/x86_64/6 $ yum --enablerepo=epel list > /dev/null $ du -hs * 8.0K base 20M epel 8.0K extras 21M local-base 56K local-extras 5.6M local-updates 0 timedhosts.txt 8.0K updates We can see the cache has been populated. $ yum clean all Loaded plugins: fastestmirror, priorities, security Cleaning repos: local-base local-extras local-updates Cleaning up Everything Cleaning up list of fastest mirrors $ du -hs * 8.0K base 20M epel 8.0K extras 8.0K local-base 8.0K local-extras 8.0K local-updates 8.0K updates Wait, the epel directory still has data! $ yum --enablerepo=epel clean all Loaded plugins: fastestmirror, priorities, security Determining fastest mirrors Cleaning repos: epel local-base local-extras local-updates Cleaning up Everything Cleaning up list of fastest mirrors $ du -hs * 8.0K base 8.0K epel 8.0K extras 8.0K local-base 8.0K local-extras 8.0K local-updates 8.0K updates That's better. So you might need to do "yum --enablerepo=elrepo clean all" to flush your cache. -- rgds Stephen _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@xxxxxxxxxx http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos