Le 26/09/2015 14:45, Patrick O'Callaghan a écrit :
On Sat, 2015-09-26 at 14:15 +0200, Diogene Laerce wrote:
> Le 26/09/2015 14:00, Patrick O'Callaghan a écrit :
>> On Sat, 2015-09-26 at 11:46 +0200, Diogene Laerce wrote:
>>> A precision if possible : I saw "dnf list extras" which list
>>> all packages which do not belong to any repository.. I actually
>>> ran it and found a bunch of them as follow :
>>>
>>>
http://pastebin.com/6Tb3nUSz
>>>
>>> So if they do not come from any repository.. Where do they come
>>> from ?
>> Could be from a repo you have since disabled, or RPMs you
>> downloaded
>> from somewhere.
> Actually that's my point : I never installed anything except for
> some groups or packages found in the repositories cache, and
> a fortiori, certainly not any kernel packages.
I hadn't looked at your list before replying, but now I see that these
are pretty much standard packages from standard repos. I get a similar
list, so it would appear that "dnf list extras" doesn't do what it
claims to do. I don't know if that's a bug in dnf or a bug in the
documentation, but either way it might be worth reporting to BZ.
BZ ? A hive nickname ? :)
> I didn't disabled any repository either, I wouldn't even
know
> how to do this.
Very easy: just edit the repo file and change "enabled" to 0.
Thanks for the tip.
Kind regards,
--
“One original thought is worth a thousand mindless quotings.”
“Le vrai n'est pas plus sûr que le probable.”
Diogene Laerce