On Fri, 2005-10-07 at 13:08 -0400, Sam Drinkard wrote: > Thanks for the clarification Greg. I kind of figured they both would > work about the same, but didnt' know if there was a preference for one > over the other or not. Just seems like up2date is the simpler of the > two with a few clicks of the rodent and its done. > The up2date in CentOS uses a yum backend to retrieve the files anyway (though it uses an older version of yum than is included in CentOS-4). For updates only, up2date is very simple for users with a GUI, which is why it is included. yum is more for all package management (install, remove, updates), and it can do updates easily from the command line. I use yum exclusively on server machines where I don't load a GUI ... but I have to admit that I also use up2date on my main workstation :) > Greg Knaddison wrote: > > >Snowman, > > > >up2date and yum both work on top of or maybe "in cooperation with" the > >rpm package management system. So, if you like using one or the other > >to do your updating at a given time you can use either one and they > >won't get confused since they both store/read information from the > >rpmDB. > > > >Yum uses metadata about a repository to know what is going on, what > >updates might exist, etc. You can use "yum list updates" to see what > >needs to be updated. Some people put a "yum list updates" and then > >redirect it to mail to them in their daily cron so that they know if > >they have updates rather than using the up2date applet. > > > >When you start yum it goes to the repositories in your configuration > >files, pulls down the metadata from those repositories and then parses > >through it looking for updates, packages to satisfy dependencies if > >there are updates, and other fun stuff like that. > > > >None of the files for CentOS (unless you changed something) from from > >anything RH related. I assume you know how that all works and said > >"RH" where you meant "CentOS"... > > > >Regards, > >Greg > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: not available Type: application/pgp-signature Size: 189 bytes Desc: This is a digitally signed message part Url : http://lists.centos.org/pipermail/centos/attachments/20051008/0c72677a/attachment.bin