When I do a 'yum upgrade' (on F9), I get the attached result. I looks like it's trying to connect to the Stanford network. And indeed yesterday I was at Stanford with my laptop, and it did try to connect to Stanford's wireless network, which is one of those that requires a code/logon, which I don't have.
But now I'm home again, and I still get this weird error. This is even after re-booting twice, stopping NetworkManager, and manually bringing up eth0, which I connecting through just fine.
How do I "unstick" yum?
On Mon, 2008-04-28 at 10:13 -0700, Per Bothner wrote:
When I do a 'yum upgrade' (on F9), I get the attached result. I looks like it's trying to connect to the Stanford network. And indeed yesterday I was at Stanford with my laptop, and it did try to connect to Stanford's wireless network, which is one of those that requires a code/logon, which I don't have.
But now I'm home again, and I still get this weird error. This is even after re-booting twice, stopping NetworkManager, and manually bringing up eth0, which I connecting through just fine.
How do I "unstick" yum?
run: yum clean expire-cache
see if that fixes it up for you.
-sv
seth vidal wrote:
On Mon, 2008-04-28 at 10:13 -0700, Per Bothner wrote:
When I do a 'yum upgrade' (on F9), I get the attached result. I looks like it's trying to connect to the Stanford network. And indeed yesterday I was at Stanford with my laptop, and it did try to connect to Stanford's wireless network, which is one of those that requires a code/logon, which I don't have.
But now I'm home again, and I still get this weird error. This is even after re-booting twice, stopping NetworkManager, and manually bringing up eth0, which I connecting through just fine.
How do I "unstick" yum?
run: yum clean expire-cache
see if that fixes it up for you.
Yes, it did - thanks!
(I now get "Package gnome-settings-daemon-2.22.1-0.2008.03.26.7.fc9.i386.rpm is not signed" but presumably that will get fixed shortly.)
Per Bothner wrote:
seth vidal wrote:
run: yum clean expire-cache
see if that fixes it up for you.
Yes, it did - thanks!
Cool, well nevermind my other email, Seth is on top of it as usual.
seth vidal wrote:
On Mon, 2008-04-28 at 10:13 -0700, Per Bothner wrote:
When I do a 'yum upgrade' (on F9), I get the attached result. I looks like it's trying to connect to the Stanford network. And indeed yesterday I was at Stanford with my laptop, and it did try to connect to Stanford's wireless network, which is one of those that requires a code/logon, which I don't have.
But now I'm home again, and I still get this weird error. This is even after re-booting twice, stopping NetworkManager, and manually bringing up eth0, which I connecting through just fine.
How do I "unstick" yum?
run: yum clean expire-cache
see if that fixes it up for you.
If he's using fastestmirror it may also be stuck on the prior decision to use standford right? Then it would be good to also run? yum clean plugins
Or would fastestmirror automatically abandon a fastest it cannot get to? I've never had it stuck on an inaccessible network so I'm not sure.
On Mon, 2008-04-28 at 10:48 -0700, Andrew Farris wrote:
seth vidal wrote:
On Mon, 2008-04-28 at 10:13 -0700, Per Bothner wrote:
When I do a 'yum upgrade' (on F9), I get the attached result. I looks like it's trying to connect to the Stanford network. And indeed yesterday I was at Stanford with my laptop, and it did try to connect to Stanford's wireless network, which is one of those that requires a code/logon, which I don't have.
But now I'm home again, and I still get this weird error. This is even after re-booting twice, stopping NetworkManager, and manually bringing up eth0, which I connecting through just fine.
How do I "unstick" yum?
run: yum clean expire-cache
see if that fixes it up for you.
If he's using fastestmirror it may also be stuck on the prior decision to use standford right? Then it would be good to also run? yum clean plugins
Or would fastestmirror automatically abandon a fastest it cannot get to? I've never had it stuck on an inaccessible network so I'm not sure.
yum clean expire-cache will nuke the mirrorlist and I'm pretty sure fastest-mirror will refresh itself if mirrorlist is new.
-sv