On 14/01/2008, Karl Larsen <k5di@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > Michael Schwendt wrote: > > On 14/01/2008, Karl Larsen <k5di@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > >> I tried using the livna repo without freshrpms being present and > >> still get a problem from livna! And it is still the problem of livna > >> wanting to update files not on my computer. Wierd! > >> > > > > No, no, no. Read the other thread more carefully. You get many things > > wrong and make up your own false theories. It's tiresome. freshrpms > > and livna do conflict. I've told you in the other thread how they > > conflict. And during a yum update, any new packages which are pulled > > in are called "updates", too. That's has nothing to do with livna. > > > > > >> http://ayo.ie.freshrpms.net/fedora/linux/8/i386/freshrpms/RPMS/vlc-0.8.6d-1.fc8.i386.rpm: > >> [Errno -1] Package does not match intended download > >> > >> It says it doesn't have the right vlc number or whatever. > >> > > > > No, it means the download ended with a checksum that doesn't match the > > metadata. You may need to clean your yum cache. > > > > > I have cleaned my dam yum 3 times today! I have not done so just > before trying freshrpms however so will try that next. The vlc at > freshrpms is much older than the one at livna. One more try today. The vlc at freshrpms may be older, but some of its dependencies at freshrpms are seen as _newer_ by RPM due to how RPM version comparison works. E.g. the "0.0.0 greater than 0" case mentioned before. That's why you run into dependency problems. It is not enough to just disable a repo in your yum config files, you also need to erase packages installed from that repo. And explicit execution of "yum --enablerepo=..." for cherry-picking packages is only for people who know what they are doing.