On 5/14/19 7:41 PM, Joe Zeff wrote:
I don't know, but I have a guess. The dnf database not only includes every package you have installed, it has what repositories provided them. Presumably, dnf list extras only returns those packages that came from a repo that's currently enabled.
Maybe, but I don't think so since dnf says that *all* those packages that supposedly aren't available anymore come from either fedora or updates...
Also, this doesn't explain why those packages were marked as not available anymore in the first place, since they still seem to be present in the regular F30 repositories (at lest according to [1]).
On 05/14/2019 11:53 AM, eqie@mailbox.org wrote:
On 5/14/19 7:41 PM, Joe Zeff wrote:
I don't know, but I have a guess. The dnf database not only includes every package you have installed, it has what repositories provided them. Presumably, dnf list extras only returns those packages that came from a repo that's currently enabled.
Maybe, but I don't think so since dnf says that*all* those packages that supposedly aren't available anymore come from either fedora or updates...
I wasn't aware of that. I sit corrected.