On Mon, Apr 27, 2015 at 4:52 PM, Les Mikesell lesmikesell@gmail.com wrote:
On Mon, Apr 27, 2015 at 4:34 PM, Matthew Miller mattdm@mattdm.org wrote:
On Mon, Apr 27, 2015 at 04:04:41PM -0500, Les Mikesell wrote:
Interesting, but it seems to _only_ show groups that weren't included in the anaconda install. For example where the saved anaconda-ks-cfg shows @gnome-desktop and @development, 'yum grouplist' only shows 'MATE Desktop' which was installed later.
Does the "hidden" flag help here?
Well it's different, but still doesn't seem right. That shows: Installed environment groups: MATE Desktop and Installed groups: Core Dial-up Networking Support Fonts Guest Desktop Agents Input Methods MATE Multimedia but still no mention of development or gnome.
And I guess the other piece of this would be finding individual packages that are not encompassed by the groups - or pulled in by dependencies. Is there some database-like approach to take the full list of packages, then reduce it to the minimal list of groups and top-level packages to pull the rest in? It probably will work to hand the raw list to yum but I'd like to make an understandable list in a script even if the packages had been added piecemeal in the first place as someone noticed the need for them.