On Friday 04 March 2005 22:58, Jeff Spaleta wrote: > what istall type are you actually doing in the installer? are you > doing a minimal install or server? 'server' as a default install type > is a rather generic concept.. and is not going to meet any single > person's definition completely. To really setup a server for specific > tasks requires customization you aren't going to be able to rely on a > default install type in the installer to give you exactly what you > want. Why isn't kickstart file creation enough flexibility to create > the system the specific system that you want? There is room in the > ecosystem for an array of pre-baked kickstart files if there are > people in the community willing to work on them..collect them.. and > maintain them. > > -jef"mmmmm beer"spaleta Jeff, its a custom install - when you get to the selection of installed packages the following components were selected: Textbased Internet Server Configuration Tools Web Server Mail Server FTP Serever Mysql Database (add php-mysql) Development Tools Administration Tools System Tools (add am-utils) With that, in both FC3 and Rawhide you still get some 32bit rpms. From the installer there is no way to tell what will end up installing 32bit stuff. So I went ahead and tried install a AMD64 box with FC3 and the packages above, I then "rpm -qa --queryformat="%{name}-%{version}-%{release}.%{arch}\n" | grep i386 | xargs rpm -e" After that I had a box without 32bit packages... Then I do a yum update to get the latest updates (that was about 3 weeks ago) and when I get back it showed that boost for some reason wanted to install "some" i386 packages - 142 of them to be exact... I'm sure that was just a packaging error of some form (dependency to -devel package I think) but when trying to figure out if there is a way to prevent this, I found no good answer... Peter.