On Tue, Oct 29, 2013 at 11:59 AM, Michael Hennebry <hennebry@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > Maybe I was not clear. > I'm refering to reinstalling CentOS. > My current CentOS hangs after trying to start gdm. > My diagnostic efforts have been for nought, > so I want to more or less start over. > I already have a "list" of all the repositories I want. > It's the contents of the aforementioned /etc/yum/repos.d . > > I could try to install every single repository by hand. > > I don't remember how I installed most of them, but I could try. > I would probably succeed, but its not a certainty. > Following that, I could install all the packages by hand. > I could edit my list of installed packages and make a massive yum command. Most repositories will have a 'name-release.rpm' where name is the name of the repository. This will install the entry under /etc/yum/repos.d and set up the gpg key for the rpms. If you have a URL to the repo release rpm, yum can install for you with: yum install URL However, note that your current problem may be related to something you've pulled from a 3rd party repository so you should avoid blindly repeating the process. I'd install/update the package list from the base repositories first, then add EPEL and others with a policy of not overwriting base packages and make sure everything works before installing anything from repos that may overwrite any base packages. I normally keep any in the latter category set as 'enabled = 0' in the repo file and use --enablerepo= on the yum command line when I want something from them. -- Les Mikesell lesmikesell@xxxxxxxxx _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@xxxxxxxxxx http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos