I would on the contrary advise not to do it manually, as there is a
possibility to miss out a package and then the upgrade will not work.
It is easy to use *koji* on the command line:
1. Install koji: *sudo dnf install koji*
2. Create an empty directory to download the packages to: *mkdir
~/todelete*
3. Go into that directory: *cd ~/todelete*
4. Fetch the packages from the build using this command: *koji
download-build 1848938 --arch x86_64* (if your arch is not x86, then
consult koji --help for other architectures). Also the number here is the
specific build ID, in this case it matches kparal's link. Generally, if you
click on the built package on the BUILD card in Bodhi (
https://bodhi.fedoraproject.org/updates/FEDORA-2021-82a48ba538), it will
take you to Koji, where you will be able to find that ID (
https://bodhi.fedoraproject.org/updates/FEDORA-2021-82a48ba538)
5. The above command will download all packages needed for the update.
Sometimes, it downloads more than necessary.
6. Update the package using dnf (it will automatically select only those
needed by your system): *sudo dnf update ./** (on condition that in that
directory only the appropriate packages exist, otherwise, you need to
specify the wildcard).
7. after the update, delete the content of that directory and you are
all set.
Happy updating.
Lukas
On Fri, Oct 29, 2021 at 9:18 AM José Abílio Matos <jamatos(a)fc.up.pt> wrote:
On Friday, 29 October 2021 00.19.36 WEST Ed Greshko wrote:
> Looks like it isn't available yet, At least not to all mirrors.
>
> [egreshko@acer ~]$ sudo dnf upgrade --enablerepo=updates-testing
> --advisory=FEDORA -2021-a8034992a9
> Fedora 35 - x86_64 - Test Updates 17 kB/s | 11 kB
> 00:00 Fedora 35 - x86_64 - Test Updates 862 kB/s | 6.2
MB
> 00:07 Last metadata expiration check: 0:00:16 ago on Fri Oct 29
07:18:31
> 2021. No security updates needed, but 316 updates available
> Dependencies resolved.
> Nothing to do.
> Complete!
Looking into the status of the update it says "pending->testing" and so it
is not yet in testing (nowhere in the world). :-)
If you want you can follow the links and go directly to koji to get the
rpms and to install them locally (using dnf, of course).
I know that there are ways to do this using the command line but I only
search for that when the update has a very large number of packages, in
this case I would do it manually. :-)
--
José Abílio
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