Michael Hennebry wrote: > On Mon, 28 Oct 2013, Mark LaPierre wrote: > >> On 10/28/2013 05:44 PM, Michael Hennebry wrote: >>> On Sat, 26 Oct 2013, Michael Hennebry wrote: >>> >>>> Absent other ideas, I might try re-installing CentOS or re-installing >>>> X. > > I did a > yum reinstall \* > . > gdm or something still hangs. > The gdm log suggests it is happy. > >>>> After the install, >>>> I would restore the directory that listed all my repositories. >>>> This is a step I am not sure about. >>>> I have a vague recollection that that is not sufficient. >>>> What else would I need to do? >>> >>> Is there a command that I could use to record the >>> repositories I am using and restore them after the install? >>> Actually, you could just look at /etc/yum.repos.d. In there, you can also check to see if the repo is enabled, or if there's includes or excludes. We do that here, because there are systems we do *NOT* want some things updated without someone doing it manually, like the ones with very old NVidia cards, where we have to manually rebuild the proprietary drivers, or production systems, where the teams want to test the updates before they go into production. <snip> mark _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@xxxxxxxxxx http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos