Hi all,
Sorry for the bad subject. I'd like to do two things.
- Know when a RPM which is currently in only one repository pops up in a different repository. E.g. RPM going from epel-testing to epel.
- Get notified when a RPM pops up in a repository. E.g. waiting for an RPM to appear.
I know that this is quite easy to find out manually. But did anyone build a script or something else to do this "automagically"? In my company we have a mix of self-build packages, epel-testing & rpmforge packages and some other obscure things. With something like I described above we would be sure when we could throw away the makeshift packages and transition to more or less stable packages from Base, Extra or EPEL.
Cheers, Shorty
On Wed, Jan 28, 2015 at 07:16:34AM +0100, Markus "Shorty" Uckelmann wrote:
- Know when a RPM which is currently in only one repository pops up in a
different repository. E.g. RPM going from epel-testing to epel.
- Get notified when a RPM pops up in a repository. E.g. waiting for an
RPM to appear.
I use 'mrepo' [1] to sync EPEL (and other repos) to a local mirror so systems not publicly routed can get packages. It generates an email of repo changes every time it runs, so I know what is added and removed.
I also subscribe to the epel-package-announce list [2] so I can see all the EPEL updates even before they hit the mirrors.
1. http://dag.wiee.rs/home-made/mrepo/ 2. https://admin.fedoraproject.org/mailman/listinfo/epel-package-announce
Am 28.01.2015 um 18:08 schrieb Jonathan Billings:
I use 'mrepo' [1] to sync EPEL (and other repos) to a local mirror so systems not publicly routed can get packages. It generates an email of repo changes every time it runs, so I know what is added and removed.
Will take look.
I also subscribe to the epel-package-announce list [2] so I can see all the EPEL updates even before they hit the mirrors.
Yeah, I didn't see the wood for the trees ;) Thx
Cheers, Shorty