On Wed, 2009-11-04 at 16:50 +0000, Richard W.M. Jones wrote: > Newly installed Ubuntu 9.10, when you log in over ssh you may see: > > 34 packages can be updated. > 10 updates are security updates. > > I think this is a nice feature, because many administrators will log > in to servers remotely over ssh and never see the graphical > indications from packagekit et al. > > Actually I was trying to work out how it's implemented. The text goes > into /etc/motd, and as near as I can tell, the Ubuntu "update-manager" > (roughly equivalent of PackageKit) rewrites it whenever packages > become available or get installed. Is this something that PackageKit > could also do? FWIW, I've added a summary-updateinfo command to the increasingly misnamed security plugin. Takes all the same options as list-updateinfo / info-updateinfo, but just prints a small summary: % yum -q summary-updateinfo Updates Info Summary: 6 Security update(s) 56 Bugfix update(s) 10 Enhancement update(s) % yum -q summary-updateinfo new Updates Info Summary: 706 New Package update(s) % ...putting that in motd, or whatever, is your fight :). -- James Antill - james@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx "I'd just like to see a realistic approach to updates via packages." -- Les Mikesell -- fedora-devel-list mailing list fedora-devel-list@xxxxxxxxxx https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-devel-list