On 7/18/07, John Thomas <gmane-2006-04-16@xxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
Comments: rpmforge provides fine rpms. kbsingh, google, adobe, kde-redhat, CentOS-Testing , CentOS-fastrack, epel, ATRPMs also provide fine RPMs. epel seems to have some stuff that I have not found on the others (like gnucash), but enabling epel worries me about conflicts with rpmforge et al. I recalling hearing about priorities and protectbase yum plugins. My thinking is someone has mastered these issues and I could copy their setup so I could do a "yum search whatever" a "yum provides whatever", "yum update", etc without having to enable/disable repos or includepkgs/exclude packages in the repo (i.e., "just work"). I realize one size won't fit all, but your recommendations/thoughts are appreciated.
Without stepping on too many toes or getting all into the politics of the matter, EPEL has good packages, but they are unconcerned about playing nice with other repositories. The general sentiment seems to be that packagers who want their stuff distributed should simply use EPEL for distribution. RPMForge and centos play very nicely together and the developers of both projects are in frequent contact. Testing is just that. Don't use it if you're worried about possible breakage. ATrpms has some hard-to-find packages, but can replace system packages which can potentially cause issues. Basically, while it's cumbersome, using the protectbase or priorites plugins is good, and if you're concerned about a repository, you might want to limit the repositories in the .repo file to only include certain packages. -- During times of universal deceit, telling the truth becomes a revolutionary act. George Orwell _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@xxxxxxxxxx http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos