Thanks for the links, they are very informative.
So as I see currently the only way to check if there are any security updates available for Centos is to parse the errata info sent by email to Centos Announce? :D
Does anyone have another solution implemented? :) Any help will be very appreciated :)
BR, Rafal.
2015-04-08 18:15 GMT+02:00 Jonathan Billings billings@negate.org:
On Wed, Apr 08, 2015 at 03:54:18PM +0200, Rafał Radecki wrote:
What is the best way to get a list of available security updates? I found several commands for that:
- yum updateinfo list updates -q --security
- yum list-security --security -q
- yum --security check-update -q
Based on the sample output below I think I can use any of the three with some awk to get a list of packages.
Keep in mind: when using the yum-plugin-security package which provides the --security option, you're only going to see security updates in EPEL (which I see you have enabled) and not in CentOS's repos. As of yet, there are no errata data in the CentOS repos.
See previous discussion here: http://lists.centos.org/pipermail/centos/2015-January/148839.html and on centos-devel: http://lists.centos.org/pipermail/centos-devel/2014-September/011893.html
So, --security is pretty much a no-op, even when there are packages that fix security issues are available in the CentOS repos.
-- Jonathan Billings billings@negate.org _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@centos.org http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos