>> I am about to set up a computer with Centos 6 that I'll probably never >> see >> again. I don't want to give out the root password, but I would like to >> have it >> automatically and transparently update itself. >> >> What is the best way to do this? I have been looking at webpages about >> yum-cron >> and yum-updatesd but nothing directly addresses Centos 6 and it appears >> that at >> least one of those two methods is now obsolete. > > While you could certainly set a regular cron job I wouldn't recommend > doing this. While a great many updates are non-intrusive, some could cause > applications to stop working properly until restarted. > > Then there's kernel updates, which require reboots, but which do not > happen automatically upon installation...and if the system does not > reboot, properly after that update, someone is going to have to lay hands > on the keyboard. > > Point being that it's probably better if someone plans on running an > attended, periodic update. However, if you're bound and determined to perform unattended updates, a simple Google search for "unattended yum update" turned up this link: http://syamsul.net/2011/01/02/unattended-updates-on-centos/ Which even includes a comment with a link to an updated process for CentOS 6. _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@xxxxxxxxxx http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos