On Sat, Aug 16, 2008 at 4:50 PM, Seth Vidal skvidal@fedoraproject.org wrote:
On Sat, 2008-08-16 at 16:49 -0700, Akemi Yagi wrote:
On Sat, Aug 16, 2008 at 4:07 PM, Seth Vidal skvidal@fedoraproject.org wrote:
On Sat, 2008-08-16 at 14:50 -0700, Akemi Yagi wrote:
To add a bit more observation in this area...
When doing a 'yum groupinstall "foo bar", some of the groups do pull i386 packages. Again, this is on a pure x86_64 system.
I will stop this type of test unless there is something else I need to try out. At lease there was some improvement with the current version of yum.
yum 3.2.17 and above set: mutlilib_policy=best in yum.conf under [main] and it will only install x86_64 pkgs.
this is documented in the yum.conf file man page.
-sv
Thanks. That did it. By the way it is multilib_policy :-)
From the behavior I have seen, I assume 'all' is the default if not
specified. Wouldn't it be better if 'best' is made the default option? Most people will probably not be aware of this option (when the new yum hit the street) and therefore will be installing unnecessary i386 packages on their x86_64 machines. ???
all has been the default behavior forever. We're experimenting with changing that default in fedora, but I think it is a bad idea to change defaults in the middle of a centos release.
-sv
As you just pointed out, multilib_policy is new as of yum 3.2.17. So as far as CentOS is concerned, it should be okay to start with the 'best' option ? (pun not intended).
Akemi