Yum does look like it is working now, but I have multiple versions of some items installed, such as kdebase 2.5.x, and 2.4.x. There should only be one version installed. I checked on my not broken machine. Using yum remove kernel xxx worked to get the latest kernel installed, but there could be a hundred or more packages partly installed or installed with multiple versions due to the yum crash. Does anyone know how to force yum to update everything, and know where yum keeps track of its history? -cm On Tue, 2005-12-20 at 16:24 -0600, akonstam@xxxxxxxxxxx wrote: > On Tue, Dec 20, 2005 at 02:07:31PM +0000, sport wrote: > > I have three machines all 32 bit running fc4. These machines have been > > up and running without problems for five months or so. I ran yum update > > on a one machine last sunday dec. 18th, and yum eventually failed with a > > segmentation fault. I rebooted the machine, and kde won't come up. > > With the root login I was able to run gnome, and successive yum clean > > all, yum updates failed. On a second machine I tried yum update on > > monday the 19th, and yum failed in a similar fashion, and repeated > > attempts caused rpmdb 4096 Input/output errors. On a third machine I > > ran yum update on the 14th with success, and am afraid to attempt it > > again. It appears as though yum was updated in each of these. > > > > The yum.log is blank on machine #2. I have run yum remove kernel > > 2.6.4-1.1653_fc4 on this machine, and yum makes it through, but > > complains about rpmdb errors. Running yum update > > kernel-2.6.4-1.1653_fc4 completes, and says that the kernel was > > installed, but also complains of the rpmdb errors. It does add the > > kernel, but the machine fails to boot on that kernel. > > > > Does anyone know of changes made last week to some packages, possibly > > yum or rpm that could be causing this? The problem occurring on two > > separate systems and only when yum update was run in the last few days > > makes me think there is some new issue with the update mechanism. > > > > I would appreciate any comments. > > > > Thanks, > > Chris > > -- > > n one of the machines I would run this experiment, Erase : > /var/lib/rpm/__db.* > Then I would run rpm --rebuilddb > and see if things get better. > ======================================================================= > What this country needs is a good five cent microcomputer. > ------------------------------------------- > Aaron Konstam > Computer Science > Trinity University > telephone: (210)-999-7484 >