Am So, den 02.05.2004 schrieb Jim Garrison um 06:19: > Fedora FC1. > Configured several yum repos in /etc/rhn/sysconfig/sources. Would be good to know whether you did set up a list of conflicting repositories. > rhn-applet shows several updates pending. http://fedoranews.org/tchung/howto/2003-12-02-rhn-applet.shtml Is that an issue for you? > up2date says "Your system is up to date". Did you already install the up2date update package? http://fedoranews.org/updates/FEDORA-2004-083.shtml If needed do it manually using rpm directly. > I changed the repos in /etc/rhn/sysconfig/sources > several times but still got "Your system is up to date". > > Manually running "yum check-updates" gives the same list > of updates displayed by rhn-applet. yum uses /etc/yum.conf and not the sources file for up2date. > Watching up2date with ethereal reveals that it does a > GET for header.info with an "If-modified-since" header > with a very recent timestamp. When it receives > 304 Not Modified, it appears to decide nothing's needed. > > Question: > > Where does up2date cache header.info, and how does it > determine the timestamp to use in the "If-modified-since"? As far as I see up2date does not store header.info. Check your /var/spool/up2date directory and maybe delete it's content (or move it to a different place). > I suspect my header.info is 'cache poisoned' with a newer > version from a mirror that doesn't yet have the updates. There may be mirrors having difficulties with the high traffic and access volume caused by the arriving of the test 3 release. Again, provide us with information which mirrors you use and which repositories you have configured. > Jim Garrison (jhg@xxxxxxx) Alexander -- Alexander Dalloz | Enger, Germany | GPG key 1024D/ED695653 1999-07-13 Fedora GNU/Linux Core 1 (Yarrow) on Athlon CPU kernel 2.4.22-1.2188.nptl Sirendipity 14:16:50 up 5 days, 13:05, load average: 0.32, 0.25, 0.18 [ ÎÎÏÎÎ Ï'ÎÏÏÎÎ - gnothi seauton ] my life is a planetarium - and you are the stars
Attachment:
signature.asc
Description: Dies ist ein digital signierter Nachrichtenteil