On 16 12:55:S, Jim Cornette wrote: > Tom Brinkman wrote: > > On 16 10:56:S, Mike Chambers wrote: > >> On Sun, 2006-07-16 at 10:12 -0500, Tom Brinkman wrote: > >>> I was hopin you or someone else might know ;) > >> > >> I acutally ended up just using the mouse middle button. I > >> just typed in yum remove and kept on highlighting and middle > >> clicking and doing that few at a time until they were gone. > >> > >> -- > >> Mike Chambers > >> Madisonville, KY > > > > OK, but it's still a PITA ;) And we still don't know what > > caused the issue, so there's a good chance it could happen > > again > > Killing yum or rpm before they complete the cleanup phase will > leave database entries in the rpm database. I have killed either > and had to do a cleanup afterwards. > What worked for me was to go to the cache where the rpms were > cached. I knew I was bad, so I did not run yum afterwards. :-) > Anyway, from the cach directory with the yum packages, move any > rpms like the kernel out of the way. Then you want to run: > rpm -Uvh --replacepkgs --replacefiles *.rpm > on the cached rpms. This will clean the older packages out of the > database and leave only the latest version installed by > overwriting the files once again. Any bad rpms like zip for > instance will exit, but others should be one instance per > program. > > Probably the cause was mkinitrd and the kernel locking up for > some reason and railing nash to peg the cpu. Killing nash during > the update and not killing yum or pup should work. > > Alternative way, > Jim Thanks Jim, I believe you're right. FWIW, the last 3 kernels had the 'nash' problem. So for the last 2 I --exclude=kernel\* an do it only after the other updates are successful. It was probly that first 'nash' kernel that messed up the db, as I believe I did kill yum during that one. Thanks again, an I'll try an keep this in mind -- Tom Brinkman Corpus Christi, Texas -- fedora-test-list mailing list fedora-test-list@xxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe: https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-test-list