Hi, folks. Quiet on this list.... Here's a yum question. On some of my servers, in he yum.conf, I've got excludes set up. Now, when I do a full update, on the command line, I do a disableexcludes=all. The man page for yum says my only options are all, main, or repo. One of the excludes, which is on a few servers, I really don't ever want to update unless I do it manually. The other excludes are for things like video drivers, kernels, httpd... and those get updated after scheduling updates with the system owners. I'm currently working on a script that would assure that the updates I did earlier in the week, or the week before, are what would be updated on the production machines, and *NOT* anything newer, so that prod matches what's been tested in test. So, is there a way to override the excludes in yum.conf, *except* for the one package that I don't want updated? I really don't want to do rpm -qa | grep -v <package> > /tmp/current, then yum update $(cat /tmp/current). I *support* I could do yum -n update | grep -v <package> > /tmp/update, and feed that to yum... but if there's a cleaner, more elegant way to do it, I'd appreciate knowing it. mark * If you're wonder, it's apcupsd, and as I've got a number of servers on each UPS, I really don't want things to shutdown on a second or two's power outage, so I have to edit a file to change /sbin/shutdown to /bin/false.... -- redhat-list mailing list unsubscribe mailto:redhat-list-request@xxxxxxxxxx?subject=unsubscribe https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/redhat-list