Jeff Spaleta wrote:
On Fri, Dec 5, 2008 at 12:51 PM, Les Mikesell lesmikesell@gmail.com wrote:
Theoretically yes, but historically python's habit of incompatible changes have caused problems especially when things were done in the wrong order or a system was interrupted before the complete set was installed and then couldn't fix itself.
interrupted rpm transactions can cause pretty much any sub system to stop working. Feel free to dive into rpm development and create a fix for that problem.
I thought that was a separate problem (in a flurry in the FC2/FC3 era) but similar in dealing with RPM swapping incompatible db libs underneath itself. I recall for a while I defensively did a separate run of yum to just update rpm and yum to minimize the chances of failure or mismatches pulled from out-of-sync repos before starting a larger update. I don't think there have been many problems recently, but it will still be tricky to make the yum/python switch foolproof - especially if you don't permit multiple versions of python to exist at once.