On 11/06/14 06:00, Gene Czarcinski wrote:
OK, try some of the following:
yum -v group list
which should list the groups available.
yum -v group info workstation-product-environment
which shows workstation-product
and finally yum -v info workstation-product
which shows all of the packages for workstation-product (which is what I belive you are
looking for).
What I am asking is, what I am looking for is, how to install GNOME after an fresh install
of F21 with KDE.
In previous versions of Fedora the command....
yum group list
returned a list including "GNOME Desktop (gnome-desktop-environment)"
And one would simply invoke .....
yum groupinstall 'GNOME Desktop' or gnome-desktop-environment and the needful and
you were done.
Now in F21 you don't get that.... You get.... (as I've now written more than
once)
Available environment groups:
Fedora Server
Fedora Cloud Server
Fedora Workstation
KDE Plasma Workspaces
Xfce Desktop
LXDE Desktop
Cinnamon Desktop
MATE Desktop
Sugar Desktop Environment
Development and Creative Workstation
Web Server
Infrastructure Server
Basic Desktop
Minimal Install
And one can quickly notice "GNOME Desktop (gnome-desktop-environment)" is
nowhere to be seen....
And, as previously written as well, one could type
yum group install "Fedora Workstation"
thinking that would get them GNOME but they will be greeted with ....
--> Finished Dependency Resolution
Error: fedora-release-nonproduct conflicts with fedora-release-workstation-21-0.16.noarch
Error: firewalld-config-standard conflicts with fedora-release-workstation-21-0.16.noarch
Error: firewalld-config-workstation conflicts with
firewalld-config-standard-0.3.12-1.fc21.noarch
Error: fedora-release-workstation conflicts with fedora-release-nonproduct-21-0.16.noarch
Error: firewalld-config-standard conflicts with
firewalld-config-workstation-0.3.12-1.fc21.noarch
You could try using --skip-broken to work around the problem
You could try running: rpm -Va --nofiles --nodigest
So..... There seems to be no easy way to install GNOME. I hope nobody is suggesting that
everyone has to discover what packages are in workstation-product and then pick and choose
and eventually get a GNOME environment.
--
If you can't laugh at yourself, others will gladly oblige.