On 07/09/2017 04:54 PM, Richard England wrote:
On 07/09/2017 03:19 PM, Richard England wrote:
> I've removed all but the fedora related files in yum.repos.d and it
> had no effect.
>>
>> Try a
>> dnf clean metadata
>> in case you are trying to access a bad repo.
> The error/traceback occurs with any dnf command I try, including the
> clean commands
>>
>
> My /etc/yum.repos.d/fedora-updates.repo looks identical to the one
> you posted.
I find that if you use the option --noplugins dnf seems to work. e.g.
dnf --noplugins dnf
This seems to help any command command, for me. This sounds like I
have installed a plugin and forgotten about it. Does anyone know how
to list the plugins that are installed or where they reside? And more
to the point, how do I remove them?
~~R
The url/IPaddr is embedded in
/usr/lib/python3.5/site-packages/dnf-plugins/dnf_zsync.py
class Plugin(dnf.Plugin):
name = 'zsync'
def __init__(self, base, cli):
super(Plugin, self).__init__(base, cli)
self.cli = cli
self.base = base
self.impl = PluginImpl('http://209.132.178.35/' +
base.conf.releasever +
'/')
def config(self):
if self.cli:
self.cli.demands.cacheonly = True
self.base.repos['updates'].md_only_cached = True
self.impl.sync_metadata(self.base.repos['updates'].cachedir)