On Fri, 5 Dec 2008, Joshua C. wrote:
2008/12/5 Seth Vidal <skvidal@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>:
Do you have an odd yum.conf? or maybe did you set obsoletes=0 in your
yum.conf or remove the obsoletes=1 line from your yum.conf?
nevertheless, we've fixed this.
a temporary work around is to add obsoletes=1 to your yum.conf under [main]
-sv
here is my yum.conf
[main]
cachedir=/var/cache/yum
keepcache=0
debuglevel=2
logfile=/var/log/yum.log
exactarch=1
obsoletes=0
gpgcheck=1
plugins=1
installonly_limit=2
metadata_expire=1800
# exclude=
# This is the default, if you make this bigger yum won't see if the metadata
# is newer on the remote and so you'll "gain" the bandwidth of not having to
# download the new metadata and "pay" for it by yum not having correct
# information.
# It is esp. important, to have correct metadata, for distributions like
# Fedora which don't keep old packages around. If you don't like this checking
# interupting your command line usage, it's much better to have something
# manually check the metadata once an hour (yum-updatesd will do this).
# metadata_expire=90m
# PUT YOUR REPOS HERE OR IN separate files named file.repo
# in /etc/yum.repos.d
I don't want to set obsolete=1
why not?
-sv
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