>'yum list extras' should show you packages you have installed that are not >available in any configured / enabled repo. This command is closer to what you would want. The problem with that command is it compares what is on the machine with what the current package is in yum. I bet it requires a network connection to work, too. It does not tell me that a package that has been superceeded is valid for that repo. Example, it tells me 3 of my kernels are not in yum when they were in fact officially released kernels. I have to weed through the output and decide case by case if its superceeded or orphaned. But even if there were a command that correctly identified orphaned packages without needing a network connection, the logic that not building all packages each development cycle saves download time doesn't hold up. -Steve ____________________________________________________________________________________ 8:00? 8:25? 8:40? Find a flick in no time with the Yahoo! Search movie showtime shortcut. http://tools.search.yahoo.com/shortcuts/#news -- fedora-devel-list mailing list fedora-devel-list@xxxxxxxxxx https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-devel-list