On 10.4.2015 09:18, Jan Zelený wrote: > On 10. 4. 2015 at 08:53:46, Petr Spacek wrote: >> On 8.4.2015 17:36, Przemek Klosowski wrote: >>> On 04/08/2015 08:39 AM, Jan Zelený wrote: >>>> On 8. 4. 2015 at 10:26:51, Reindl Harald wrote: >>>>> Am 08.04.2015 um 08:41 schrieb Jan Zelený: >>>>>> Putting the opinion of myself and the dnf team aside, I'd like to point >>>>>> out >>>>>> that the information you want is still available - dnf check-update >>>>>> will >>>>>> show you all the updates, even those that have broken deps. Running >>>>>> this >>>>>> command right after dnf upgrade will list you those that could not be >>>>>> installed >>>>> >>>>> the world don't work that way >>>>> >>>>> *nobody* even not myself would call "dnf check-update" after "dnf >>>>> upgrade" installed updates and did not complain about anything >>>> >>>> You are right, people use it the other way - we have had reports stating >>>> that dnf check-update shows packages that dnf upgrade doesn't select. In >>>> other words, the information about broken updates is still available to >>>> the user.> >>> Perhaps dnf should keep track whether it had to 'skip-broken' , and report >>> packages that were skipped during the update? >> >> I very much agree with this. As a user, I expect that 'dnf upgrade' will >> give me latest packages and that DNF will tell me the fact that newer >> packages are available but not installable. >> >> Maybe it could have a form of plugin, at least for the beginning? > > Again, dnf check-update already does that. While I understand the request to > make it more convenient, I can't promise you that we will do that. Please try > to understand, we try to keep dnf as structurally clean as possible and > duplicating functionality does not help that. I was thinking more about a plugin which calls 'check-update' automatically when 'upgrade' command finishes. -- Petr^2 Spacek -- devel mailing list devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx https://admin.fedoraproject.org/mailman/listinfo/devel Fedora Code of Conduct: http://fedoraproject.org/code-of-conduct